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Colliery accidents trap at least 47 miners

www.chinanews.cn 2007-04-18 09:59:22

(Source: Xinhua)

This photo shot on Tuesday shows the scene of a coal mine accident in
Zhuzhou city, south China's Hunan Province. Flooding at the mine trapped
12 of 31 miners on Monday, April 16, 2007. The rescue work is still
underway. [Photo: Xinhua]

Apr.18 - At least 47 miners are trapped below ground in Chinese coal pits
after three separate accidents happened all on the same day.
Rescuers said at least two miners were trapped in the most recent
accident, which occurred in northeast China's Heilongjiang Province at
around 8:00 p.m. on Monday when a mine collapsed in Jixi City.
Sources with the provincial coal mine supervision authority said the
privately-run mine was not registered with local supervision authorities
and was operating illegally.
The cave-in followed two major accidents in central China's Hunan and
Henan provinces, in which 45 miners are trapped.
The first accident, which happened at around 3:40 p.m. on Monday when
Changcheng Mine, Zhuzhou city, Hunan, flooded, trapping 12 people, said
Huang Fangming, of the provincial administration of coal mine safety.
Rescue teams had been dispatched from neighboring cities to help with the
operation to reach the trapped miners, but heavy rains had hampered their
efforts, Huang said.
Changcheng Mine is a privately-operated mine with a production capacity
of 30,000 tons a year. Its license and certificates were valid, Huang
said.
On the same day, 33 miners were trapped after an explosion in a coal mine
in Pingdingshan City of Henan.
Forty-two miners were working underground when the blast occurred and
only nine managed to escape, local government sources said.
Zhou Hui, a miner who survived the blast, said "I was filling up the cart
with coals, then a huge wave knocked me over. I had to climb about 15
meters to reach the mouth of the pit."
Zhang said before the blast happened, miners used dynamites to blow
sections of deserted rails, which might have set off the gas or coal dust
in the pits.
After rescue operations began, a second explosion shook the mine at
around 4:00 a.m. Tuesday and injured 12 rescuers, but the operation
continued, said Li Jiucheng, head of the provincial coal mine safety
supervision.
Li said some workers suffered serious burns, and they are being treated
at a local hospital.
Li said the rescuers had encountered many difficulties. The tunnels were
built with wooden structures, and a massive fire was still burning
underground, he said, adding that the shafts had a 59 to 69 degree
gradient, and had multiple cave-ins.
The private mine, with a annual capacity of 60,000 tons, is still waiting
for the renewal of its license which has expired. It was operating
illegally when the accident occurred, Li said.
Local police are seeking six people in connection with the incident,
including the mine owner, mine manager and two deputy managers, who have
disappeared. The police have frozen the mine owner's bank account.
Rescuers at the scene said the absence of the mine owner was a major
hindrance as no specific geological information was available. They said
the shafts were poorly designed with inefficient ventilation.
Rescuers are working in shifts to dig tunnels near the main pit and pipe
in inert gas to quell the fire. Several family members of the trapped
miners are waiting outside the mine.
Zhao Tiechui, head of the State Administration of Coal Mine Safety, and
provincial safety officials arrived at the scene of the accident to
direct the rescue operations.
Sources with the administration said Premier Wen Jiabao and State
Councilor Hua Jianmin have required the local authorities to design
scientific plans to save the trapped miners, and work to prevent
occurrence of further accidents.
This is the second major coal mine accident to hit the city in less than
a month, following a mine flood on March 23, which killed 15 miners.
Coal mine accidents killed 4,746 people in 2006 and 357 in the first two
months of this year, figures from the State Administration of Work Safety
show.
China has set a goal of reducing the death rate to 2.1 for every one
million tons of coal produced by 2010, down from 2.81 in 2005. The 2005
rate was 70 times worse than the United States and seven times than
Russia and India.

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