Off the wire
China publishes English edition of history book on WWII resistance against Japan  • 1st LD: China's housing market continues recovery  • Rain stokes pollution fears at Tianjin blasts site  • China moves toward market-oriented exchange rate: former U.S. Fed chief  • Myanmar unveils parts of nationwide ceasefire agreement  • Xinhua China news advisory -- Aug. 18  • SMEs contribute 50 pct of Singapore's GDP in 2014: minister  • Urgent: Indonesian officials say rescuers reach plane crash site  • Sri Lankan president removes members from party's central committee  • 1st Ld: Mourning ceremony held for blasts victims in Tianjin  
You are here:   Home

2nd Ld: Tianjin mourns for blasts victims

Xinhua, August 18, 2015 Adjust font size:

Tianjin observed a moment of mourning for victims of the warehouse explosion on Tuesday.

Cargo ship horns blared in honor of the dead, while people gathered to stand in silent mourning at 9 a.m. on Tuesday, the seventh day after the accident.

According to Chinese tradition, the seventh day after one's death is an occasion when the soul returns home. It is typically the day spent mourning for relatives and friends.

The city also sounded a siren as more than 300 people, including officials from the Tianjin municipal government, paid silent tribute at a garden in the Binhai New Area, where the warehouse is located.

Firemen, armed policemen, volunteers and relatives of the victims lined up to lay bouquets of white chrysanthemum in front of a memorial wall, where a solemn sign hung declaring "condolences to those who died in the August 12 accident".

A woman, who declined to be named, told Xinhua that the day of blasts was her 30th birthday. "I just finished celebrating, when the building began to shake. I thought it was an earthquake," she said, sobbing. Her apartment was 10 kilometers away from the blasts site.

"The sky was lit up. It was horrible," she said. "It was my most unforgettable birthday. I will never be happy on my birthdays in the future."

At the TEDA Hospital, where the wounded were sent, more than 100 medical staff lit candles arranged as a heart outside the emergency hall.

At the Tianjin development zone fire station, hundreds of firefighters bowed to 29 photos of the firemen who died in the flames.

Two explosions ripped through a warehouse storing hundreds of tons of toxic chemicals last Wednesday night. Death toll from the accident has risen to 114, with 692 people hospitalized and 57 still unaccounted for. Endi