Five dead, two injured after blast at Hanwha Aerospace plant in Korea

A police officer stands in front of heavily damaged production line for rocket propellant of Hanwha Aerospace's factory after an explosion, in Daejeon, yesterday. (Reuters)

A police officer stands in front of heavily damaged production line for rocket propellant of Hanwha Aerospace’s factory after an explosion, in Daejeon, yesterday. (Reuters)

Five people have ‌died and two others were injured yesterday after an ⁠explosion and fire on a Republic of Korea production line for rocket propellant at a factory operated by Hanwha Aerospace in the city of Daejeon, officials said.

The two survivors, including one who was badly burned, had escaped from the facility themselves, a fire official ​told a briefing.

“Authorities have yet to identify the victims because their bodies were severely damaged,” a health official told the same briefing.

A ‌fire official said that ⁠an explosion ​had triggered the blaze, though the cause of ​the blast was still being investigated.

Shares in Hanwha Aerospace fell 2.8% in afternoon trade, while the holding company Hanwha Corp saw its shares drop 3.4%.

The blast appeared to have occurred while water was being used to clean explosive material from tools making rocket propellant, a Hanwha official told a company briefing.

“We bow our heads in apology to the ‌victims and their bereaved ‌families,” said Chief Executive ⁠Officer Son Jae-il, pledging to co-operate fully with authorities ⁠to determine the cause ⁠of the accident.

The five dead included two temporary workers in their 20s and all were employed by Hanwha, the company said.

Hanwha is a defence and aerospace company. Its factory in Daejeon produces large propulsion engines and ​handles rocket propellants.

Authorities were unable to obtain the factory’s layout since it is protected under national security laws, an official said at an earlier briefing.

Republic of Korea President Lee Jae-myung called for the mobilisation of all available resources to respond to the accident and for an investigation, his office said in a text message to reporters.

 

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