Shanghai subway a safety worry, says mayor

Sun Jan 27, 2008 10:05pm EST
 
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SHANGHAI, Jan 28 (Reuters) - The mayor of Shanghai has warned that the city's frenzy of subway construction has reached an "extreme level", placing pressure on traffic and safety, state media reported on Monday.

With work scheduled this year on seven new and existing subway lines, the city's traffic would face "tough times", the China Daily quoted Mayor Han Zheng as saying.

"With so much work being carried out at the same time and long lengths of new tracks being put into use, both the construction and operation of Shanghai's subway have reached an extreme level," Han said.

"I am really worried about its safety."

Subway work, including the building of 116 stations, would affect more than 1,000 roads in Shanghai this year, the newspaper said.

Han's comments come after a train on a subway line under the Huangpu River broke down between two stations during peak hour on Friday morning, leaving passengers gasping for air.

"It was all dark and there was no ventilation. People were scared and a woman said she was suffocating," the paper quoted Bu Chunyuan, a journalist on the train, as saying.

"Some broke the door and the ceiling by force to let in some air," Bo said.

Shanghai plans to extend its subway to cover 510 km (317 miles) by 2012, from its current coverage of 234 km, to ease passenger loads on the network which has been plagued with delays in recent years.

Three officials were arrested in connection with a collapsed subway tunnel under the Huangpu in 2004, which caused floods and nearby land and buildings to sink, costing the city 850 million yuan ($118 million).

 
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