Chinese kindergarten investigated after children found to have high lead levels, state media says

Chinese kindergarten investigated after children found to have high lead levels, state media says
Children show their medals won at the competition in Beijing, China. (AFP)
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Updated 08 July 2025
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Chinese kindergarten investigated after children found to have high lead levels, state media says

Chinese kindergarten investigated after children found to have high lead levels, state media says
  • Online Chinese media outlets said students’ symptoms included stomach and leg pain, loss of appetite and hair loss

HONG KONG: Chinese authorities have arrested eight people after more than 200 children who fell ill in the northwestern province of Gansu were found to have abnormally high levels of lead in their blood, the country’s state broadcaster reported on Tuesday.

The children attended a privately owned kindergarten in Gansu’s Tianshui, which was set up in 2022, and had 251 children enrolled, the broadcaster, CCTV, said. Investigations had found lead in food served to students, it said.

Online media outlets Jimu and The Cover, citing parents, said students’ symptoms included stomach and leg pain, loss of appetite and hair loss.

CCTV said authorities were still investigating the kindergarten’s staff, including its principal and legal representative.

Reuters was not able to establish contact details for the school or verify the information independently.

Food safety has improved in China following a series of scandals, including the 2008 discovery of toxic infant milk, which undermined public trust and consumer confidence.

Inspections by regulators in 2022 found safety issues were more common in the catering industry and agricultural products, according to state media reports.

CCTV said investigators tested 223 samples of food from the school. They found two samples — a red date cake and a corn sausage roll — had lead content of 1052 mg/kg and 1340 mg/kg respectively, far above the official limit of 0.5 mg/kg, it said.

The report said investigators traced the lead to paint whose packaging had clearly marked it as inedible.

So far, 201 children have been admitted to hospital and all families are receiving free medical treatment, the broadcaster said, citing local authorities.

“The incident has caused physical and mental harm to the children and parents of Peixin kindergarten, and we are very sad. We will learn profound lessons,” the broadcaster said, citing local authorities.


Migrant vessel sinks off Malaysia-Thailand border, hundreds missing

Updated 26 sec ago
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Migrant vessel sinks off Malaysia-Thailand border, hundreds missing

Migrant vessel sinks off Malaysia-Thailand border, hundreds missing
KUALA LUMPUR: Hundreds were missing on Sunday after a boat sank near the Thailand-Malaysia border, as 10 survivors and one body were recovered, the Malaysian maritime authority said.
More victims might still be found at sea some three days after the sinking of the vessel, which left Buthidaung, Myanmar, with about 300 people on board, said First Admiral Romli Mustafa, the maritime authority director of the northern Malaysian states of Kedah and Perlis.
Among the survivors found in the waters off Langkawi were three Myanmar men, two Rohingya men and one Bangladeshi man, while the body was that of a Rohingya woman, state media Bernama said, citing Kedah police chief Adzli Abu Shah.
Members of the mainly Muslim Rohingya minority periodically flee majority-Buddhist Myanmar, where they are seen as foreign interlopers from South Asia, who are denied citizenship and face abuse.
The Malaysia-bound people initially boarded a large vessel but as they neared the border, they were instructed to transfer onto three smaller boats, each carrying about 100 people, to avoid detection by the authorities, Adzli was quoted as saying.
The status of the other two boats was not known, and a search-and-rescue operation was ongoing, he said.

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