China has punished eight officials for polluting a 
chain of once thriving lakes near Beijing, pushing a drive for greener growth, 
state media said on Friday. 
The report came the day after a chemical factory blast near a northeastern 
river, the scene of major toxic spill last year. 
The Baiyangdian lakes, a two-hour drive south of Beijing, made national 
headlines for their stinking water and a mass death of fish this spring. 
The State Environmental Protection Administration (SEPA) concluded that a 
glut of paper mills and a lack of waste treatment in nearby towns were largely 
to blame, People's Daily, said on Friday. 
Seven local environment officials and town heads were sacked or asked to 
resign for the "serious damage" that caused losses of 9 million yuan ($1.1 
million), while another official was disciplined, the paper said. 
On Thursday, two people were injured in an explosion at a chemical plant on 
the Songhua River, which passes through Harbin, the capital of Heilongjiang 
province, the Beijing News said on Friday. 
It did not say if any chemicals flowed into the river. A November blast at a 
petrochemical plant in neighboring Jilin province poured 100 tonnes of a toxic 
benzene compound into the river and forced taps in Harbin to be cut off for 
days. 
Xie Zhenhua, the head of SEPA at the time, resigned after the spill seeped 
into Russia, making it an international incident. 
China vowed last month to invest more than $1 billion over the next five 
years to clean up the chronically polluted Songhua, and SEPA this week ordered 
safety overhauls at 20 chemical and petrochemical plants located near rivers. 
Beijing has now made balanced growth and greater respect for the environment 
a key element of a five-year development plan that was approved by parliament in 
early March.