2015-01-02 17:30
Shangai - The bitter pain of bereavement turned to tears of anger
Friday for relatives of the 36 killed in a New Year's Eve crush in
Shanghai, as they accused authorities of failing to control the crowds.
Li
Juan was only a few metres away from her younger sister Li Na on the
Bund when the accident happened on a wide stairway leading to a
waterfront promenade.
"It all feels like a dream and I still
cannot believe that she is gone," she said, weeping uncontrollably and
struggling to get her words out.
The 23-year-old victim worked as an assistant teacher in an early learning centre.
Also read: 34 killed in stampede at Guinea beach concert
"The
government is responsible for the accident," Li said, adding she only
saw six to eight police on the staircase. "I couldn't see any other
police on the plaza" below, she added, before collapsing in grief on the
floor.
The stampede took place as vast numbers of people crammed into a square named for Chen Yi, Shanghai's first Communist mayor.
Most
of the fatalities were young women, authorities said, and Li was from
one of three families who spoke to AFP Friday about their lost loved
ones.
Qi Xiaoyan, a 21-year-old migrant worker, came to Shanghai
from nearby Anhui province just four months ago to earn money to support
her family back home, her cousin said.
"I cannot imagine
something like this would ever happen in a city like Shanghai," said Cai
Jinjin, who has lived in Shanghai for 10 years.
"Besides the sadness, I'm more bitterly disappointed in this city."
All
but four of the dead on a list of 32 identified victims released by the
city government were aged 25 or under, and 21 were female. The youngest
was a 12-year-old boy, Mao Yongjie.
He became separated from his
mother in the overwhelming flow of revellers, news magazine Caixin
reported, and efforts by hospital staff to save his life failed. His
mother spent New Year's day crying until she passed out from exhaustion,
Caixin added.
The crush is Shanghai's worst accident since a fire
in a high-rise residential building killed 58 people in 2010, and a
black mark for the commercial hub's international reputation.
The
official news agency Xinhua said municipal authorities had been caught
in a wave of criticism for "not making effective preparative measures to
cope with the crowds that flock the Bund".
Oldest victimThe
oldest fatality was Du Shuanghua, 37, whose wife told AFP he was the
family's only breadwinner and she had not told their eight-year-old son
that his father was dead.
Fan Ping showed AFP pictures of the
family together on her phone, but struggled to find the one she wanted
her husband to be remembered by, before refusing to look at it herself.
Friends
who were with Du on the Bund told Fan that her husband was still
conscious when he arrived at the Shanghai Number One People's Hospital,
where most of the injured were taken. But she never saw him alive again.
Police
and security guards prevented relatives from entering the hospital
before eventually allowing only two members of each family into a
waiting area.
"We waited desperately from midnight the first day
to 9:00 pm the next day. The hospital did not give me any updates on my
husband until we were told to go to the funeral home to see his dead
body," Fan said.
Relatives wailed uncontrollably at a funeral home
where some of the bodies were taken, with one woman crumpling with
despair almost immediately after coming out with other family members
holding her up.
One man said: "My son is in there, I can't believe this happened."
City
authorities on Friday raised the number of injured by two to 49,
according to a statement. Four were in critical condition, Xinhua said
citing hospital sources, and another nine were severely hurt.
People continued to gather at the accident scene, some laying flowers in a government-approved show of mourning.
University
student Chen Xiaohang placed white chrysanthemums at the memorial site
in memory of the sister of a high-school classmate who died.
"I feel very sad about this and I hope the government will offer better safety controls for events like this," she said.
Shanghai
residents also questioned why authorities did not control the crowds,
although police said a "more than normal" 700-strong force was present.
"The
Shanghai government should take responsibility for the incident. Most
of the young victims must be the only child of their families," said
taxi driver Xu Jianzhong.
Under China's strict birth control regulations most couples are restricted to a single child.
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