Medical and Hospital News  
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Chinese apparel chief latest billionaire to vanish: company
by Staff Writers
Beijing, China (AFP) Jan 8, 2016


Chinese hospital demolished with patient still inside
Beijing (AFP) Jan 9, 2016 - Workers partially demolished a Chinese hospital with several doctors and a patient still inside, media reported Saturday, burying bodies stored in its morgue under rubble and prompting an investigation.

Around 20 people dressed in military fatigues on Thursday destroyed part of Fourth Affiliated Hospital of Zhengzhou University, Huiji district, in the capital of central Henan province, according to the public television channel CCTV.

"I was operating...(an X-ray) machine. The noise (of the demolition) was terrifying," Liu Chunguang, the hospital's director of radiology, told the channel.

"My patient was sitting beside me, shouting that there was an earthquake. The patient ran away, terrified," he said, adding that only a few doctors and one patient were in the hospital at the time.

Images published by Chinese media apparently taken at the site show several rooms with collapsing ceilings, holes through brick walls, swinging lights as well as masses of loose cables and debris.

The hospital's morgue was "razed", according to local newspaper Dahebao, and six of the bodies stored there covered in rubble, while medical equipment worth 4 million yuan ($600,000) was damaged.

Three hospital employees were injured during a confrontation with the demolition workers, CCTV reported.

Authorities in Huiji district told AFP Saturday that they were currently investigating the incident but results would not be announced before Monday.

On Friday they said they had not yet identified the people who carried out the demolition. The buried bodies had also yet to be recovered.

"It must be the business which is carrying out roadworks (near the hospital) which ordered this!" one person said in an online forum. Forced demolitions are frequent in China.

Other internet users criticised local media for not sufficiently covering the demolition, which only received widespread attention when it was picked up by CCTV.

The chairman of one of China's most prominent fashion firms, Metersbonwe, has disappeared, the company said, prompting media speculation Friday that he may have been caught up in the country's anti-corruption drive.

Metersbonwe could reach neither Zhou Chengjian, ranked China's 62nd richest man last year by wealth publisher Hurun, nor the secretary of the board, it said in a statement to the Shenzhen stock exchange, where it is listed.

Trading in its shares would remain suspended, it said on Friday, "to protect investors' interests".

Without citing a source, the Qianjiang Evening News said Zhou may have been detained in connection with an insider trading case.

The announcement came only weeks after the four-day disappearance of Guo Guangchang, dubbed "China's Warren Buffett" and the chairman of one of China's biggest private-sector conglomerates, Club Med owner Fosun.

Fosun said he was cooperating with judicial authorities as reports linked him to a corruption investigation.

Chinese authorities are targeting the financial sector as part of a sweeping anti-graft campaign following a stock market rout that rocked global markets over the summer.

Hurun estimated Zhou's net worth at $4.1 billion. Once a poor tailor, he built up Shanghai-based Metersbonwe into one of the best-known fashion brands in China.

The firm is one of the most prominent of several unusually named English-language brands in China that are largely unknown outside the country.

Like a homegrown H&M, the company specialises in inexpensive clothing for young people and has nearly 5,000 outlets and franchises across the country, according to its website.

The Metersbonwe name was created from Chinese characters intended to sound foreign to domestic consumers, reports say.

In recent years it has sought to build its brand internationally. Actor Shia LaBeouf wore a Metersbonwe t-shirt in the third Transformers film in 2011.


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