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The heroes who didn't return: Tianjin mourns firefighters lost in port blaze

Relatives recall the young firemen who answered the call in city's hour of need

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Soldiers, police officers and paramilitary policy bow their heads at a ceremony on Tuesday to mourn the victims of Tianjin's explosions. Photo: Xinhua
Jun Maiin BeijingandKeira Huang

Zhang Kuan, 48, regrets having introduced his nephew to the firefighting department at Tianjin's port.

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"The firefighters in the same vehicle with him are all missing now," Zhang said. "The commander should have given them the right orders. I hope the investigation finds out whether he did."

He called for authorities to be transparent about the rescue mission. "I know nothing about the rescue. Are they still looking for the missing? Is the air safe there?"

His nephew, who turned 18 in May, joined the firefighting unit in June, and was still in training when he rushed to the scene. "I don't think he should have been sent there," Zhang said. "He did not have enough knowledge. He hadn't passed the evaluation yet."

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His nephew, from Qing county in Hebei province, made his last call home at around 10pm that night for his daily chat with his mother. The family did not learn of the fatal blast until the next morning.

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