Shenzhen landslide man-made event, not natural disaster

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Photo taken with a drone on Dec. 24, 2015 shows the landslide site at an industrial park in Shenzhen, south China's Guangdong Province. More than 5,000 rescuers with over 700 excavators and bulldozers are still searching through rubble for signs of life following Sunday's landslide at an industrial park in the southern Chinese city of Shenzhen. (Xinhua/Mao Siqian)

A landslide that has left dozens missing in south China's Shenzhen City was a work safety incident, not a geological disaster, a State Council investigation team confirmed Friday.

The tragedy was caused by the collapse of a huge pile of construction waste, rather than any natural geological phenomenon, the investigation team said in a statement.

The State Administration of Work Safety will lead an investigation into the accident.

"The investigation will start immediately. Those responsible for the incident will be seriously punished in accordance with laws and regulations," said the statement.

Meanwhile, Shenzhen Party secretary Ma Xingrui and other city officials apologized to the public on behalf of the Shenzhen government and the city Party committee in a televised press conference on Friday night.

Ma said Shenzhen will actively cooperate with the investigation.

Yang Shengjun, head of the Shenzhen Housing and Urban-Rural Development Bureau, said that there is still "some risk" of more landslides at three separate locations in the industrial park, and that they have dispatched professionals to deal with it.

"There are also dangerous chemical items that need to be identified and treated," Yang said, adding that no air or water contamination has been detected since the disaster.

On Sunday, construction waste collapsed on Hengtaiyu industrial park in Guangming New District in Shenzhen, covering an area of 380,000 square meters, burying or damaging 33 buildings.

So far, one person has been rescued and four bodies found. There are still 75 people unaccounted for.

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