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Death Toll Climbs after Explosions Rock China City

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The death toll continues to climb in the massive explosions that rocked the Chinese port city of Tianjin Wednesday night.  Fifty people have been killed in the warehouse blasts, including a dozen firefighters.

The powerful explosions devastated the city, blowing out the windows of high rise apartments and destroying office buildings.
   
More than 500 are injured, and some people are still missing.

"I was sleeping and got woken up by a massive explosion," eyewitness Monica Andrews recalled. "I could just feel my whole building shake. I thought it was an earthquake. So I just kind of woke up in a panic, looked out the window and the sky was red."

The National Earthquake Bureau reported two major blasts before midnight – the first with an equivalent of three tons of TNT, and the second with the equivalent of 21 tons.

The explosions took place in a mostly industrial economic development zone.

Government officials and state media say the warehouse stored dangerous materials. More than a thousand firefighters responded to the explosions.

"I was in the city just a couple of hours before the explosions took place. I would like to congratulate the prompt response of the authorities in seeking to minimize the loss of life," U.K. Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said.
    
At least a half-dozen logistics companies were destroyed in the blasts and more than a thousand new cars were burned in a nearby car park.

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About The Author

Efrem Graham
Efrem
Graham

Efrem Graham is an award-winning journalist who came to CBN News from the ABC-owned and operated station in Toledo, Ohio. His most recent honor came as co-anchor of the newscast that earned the station’s morning news program its first Emmy Award. Efrem was born in Jersey City, New Jersey, but his formal television and journalism career was born across the Hudson River in New York City. He began as an NBC Page and quickly landed opportunities to work behind-the-scenes in local news, network news, entertainment, and the network’s Corporate Communications Department. His work earned him the NBC