Thursday

37 INJURED IN BLAST AT CHEMICAL RECYCLING PLANT

  Madrid shows firefighters trying to extinguish a fire after an explosion hit a warehouse containing hazardous waste in Arganda del Rey, east of Madrid, forcing the evacuation of nearby schools. At least 30 people were injured, three of them seriously. The blast in Arganda del Rey caused a blaze from which a large, black column of smoke billowed, but emergency services said several air quality measuring stations in the area showed normal readings, easing concerns about toxic pollution. Several explosions ripped through a recycling site for hazardous chemical waste near Madrid on Thursday, injuring 37 people, three of them seriously, and forcing the evacuation of nearby schools, officials said. The blast in Arganda del Rey sent up a huge column of black smoke, but emergency services said several air quality measuring stations in the area showed normal readings, easing concerns about toxic pollution. Thirty-seven people were injured in the blasts and fire at the plant, the Arganda del Rey city hall said in a statement. Firefighters said three of the injured were in serious condition, two for burns and one with a fractured pelvis. It was unclear whether the injured were all workers at the plant. Madrid's emergency services centre said on Twitter there had been "several explosions" at the site about 30 kilometres (20 miles) southeast of the Spanish capital. The authorities are investigating the cause of the blasts. The Madrid regional government said people were evacuated from five schools and several workplaces in a radius of 500 metres (1,640 feet) around the plant as a precaution. "Neighbours have been asked not to leave their homes and to keep windows closed," a spokesman for Arganda del Rey's city hall told press, emphasising however that air quality was "normal". Firefighters said they had brought the blaze under control but 11 firefighting units were still working to extinguish it. Requimsa, the company that owns the site, "manages and collects all types of hazardous waste", according to its website. ***prbxselfnetwork***



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