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City government in China cancels waste incinerator after public protests

Pedestrians wearing mask against heavy pollution wait to cross a traffic junction in Beijing, Monday, March 16, 2015. AP Photo/Ng Han Guan

BEIJING – A city government in southern China has revoked approval of a planned waste incinerator in response to protests, in the latest case of local authorities bowing to a public outcry over health concerns.

Luoding city government in Guangdong province said in a statement Wednesday that the project fit a national policy to encourage solid waste processing in the cement industry, but that it was cancelled “in response to public demands.”

READ MORE: China to ban all coal use in Beijing by 2020 in anti-pollution effort

Thousands of residents fearful of pollution rallied Monday and clashed with police the following day, the Communist Party-affiliated Global Times newspaper reported.

A resident surnamed Huang was quoted as saying that people also wanted the company that was to build the incinerator to reduce pollution at its local cement factory.

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Photos in other state media showed people overturning a police truck.

City government in China cancels waste incinerator after public protests - image
AP Photo/Ng Han Guan, File

Similar cancellations or postponements in the construction of several waste incinerators and chemical plants have taken place in recent years, particularly in wealthier cities, where a burgeoning middle class is demanding a better quality of life.

Earlier this week, an explosion and hydrocarbon fire at a plant that produces the chemical paraxylene in Fujian province in southeast China has renewed discussion on social media of the potential dangers of such plants.

The plant had originally been slated for a more densely populated city, but protests by residents in 2007 had succeeded in getting it relocated.

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