Arrests (Finally) Announced for CCTV Fire
Surprised it took so long. Looks like they are spreading the blame around, too.
From Xinhua (this will be in all the major papers):
Police have arrested 12 people, allegedly involved in causing an accidental fire at China Central Television’s (CCTV) new building in February, a court official told Xinhua on Wednesday.
The Beijing Municipal Procurator ate decided to arrest the 12 on March 17, a procuratorate official said.
They were detained, but not formally arrested, on Feb. 11, accused of “causing an accident with dangerous articles.” The arrest means they will face trial, the official said.
The 12 arrested include former head of the CCTV’s construction office named Xu Wei, three employees of the construction team and eight employees from the fireworks provider Hunan Sanxiang Fireworks Company, the official said.
One of the three CCTV employees is Sha Peng, also board chairman of Supernova media Development Company, which is the intermediate company between CCTV and Sanxiang, the official said.
Xu Wei was detained by police just after the fire. The eight employees of the firework company fled to the neighbouring Hebei Province but were found and taken to Beijing, police said.
The highest punishment for this alleged crime is seven years in jail.
A further five were detained on Feb. 15 for illegally transporting a large amount of banned fireworks into Beijing. They are still under investigation and the procuratorate has yet to decide if it will arrest them.
The fire on the night of Feb. 9, involved a 30-storey building which housed the nearly-completed luxury Mandarin Oriental Hotel, part of the new headquarters of the state television network, in Beijing’s Central Business District.
A fireman died and seven people, including six firemen and a construction worker, were injured in the blaze.
CCTV hired a company to ignite several hundred grade A fireworks outside the hotel that night for the traditional Chinese Lantern Festival which marks the end of Lunar New Year celebrations.
Fireworks were allowed in downtown Beijing until midnight during the Spring Festival, but powerful grade A fireworks must have police approval before being set off.
According to the Beijing Fire Control Bureau, CCTV failed to get the police permit. It even ignored warnings from officers for it to cancel the fireworks show, the bureau said.
I have the feeling these folks are going to get maximum penalties.






I am quite sure they will face a tough trial but the ignoring warnings part I do not understand. If they were to set off illegal fireworks why did the enforcement people not just cancel the show instead of CCTV?
@laurentius : law is only enforced after something went wrong. That’s how China works. You see it everywhere. As long as there are no major accidents, you can get away with anything.
@ Thijs
You are right, it is not a pre-emptive environment as far as enforcement is concerned.