China to put 23 suspects on trial for deadly fire that tore through CCTV complex last year

By Gillian Wong, AP
Monday, February 22, 2010

23 suspects to stand trial in China for CCTV fire

BEIJING — Twenty-three people will go on trial this week for alleged involvement in a deadly fire triggered by an illegal fireworks display that gutted a hotel at the new headquarters of China’s main television network last year, a court official said Monday.

The trial follows a high-level government investigation into the Feb. 9, 2009, blaze at China Central Television’s striking new downtown Beijing complex that killed one firefighter and injured eight others.

The case will be heard starting Tuesday at the Beijing No. 2 Intermediate Court, a duty officer at the court said. He refused to give his name like many Chinese officials.

The suspects have been charged with causing an accident with dangerous goods, a report by the state-run China News Web site said Monday. The charge carries a maximum punishment of seven years’ imprisonment.

Those charged include the former head of CCTV’s construction bureau, Xu Wei, and six other CCTV staffers as well as six employees from two construction companies that were responsible for fire prevention and security during the fireworks display, the report said. It did not identify the other 10.

CCTV had arranged and paid for the Lunar New Year fireworks display. Earlier news reports alleged that Xu had ignored safety warnings and ordered that the powerful pyrotechnics be used.

The 520-foot (159-meter) Mandarin Oriental hotel was only weeks away from opening when the blaze engulfed it. The building has stood untouched since then, its charred metal skin twisted and peeled. The 5 billion yuan ($731 million) complex also houses the network’s headquarters — a pair of enormous, leaning buildings of black glass and steel that were not damaged in the blaze.

The disaster prompted mocking from some Chinese who resent CCTV for producing dull propaganda-style programming while enjoying a monopoly on nationwide broadcasting. The company also has drawn jeers for spending lavishly on what are seen as grandiose vanity projects such as the new complex, designed by Dutch architects Rem Koolhaas and Ole Scheeren.

Earlier this month, state media reported that an investigation by the State Council, China’s Cabinet, had found 71 people responsible for the fire, including 44 who were to face criminal charges. The State Council also ordered CCTV to pay a 3 million yuan ($440,000) fine.

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