Rescuers to save 153 workers trapped in China mine
CHINA: Rescuers worked frantically Monday to try to find more than
150 workers trapped in a flooded coal mine being built in northern
China, the latest disaster to hit the notoriously dangerous sector.
President Hu Jintao and Premier Wen Jiabao have ordered authorities
to go all-out to save the workers at the vast Wangjialing mine in Shanxi
province, China's coal-producing heartland, where the accident took
place on Sunday.
The flood was the latest in a series of accidents plaguing China's
coal mines, which are among the most dangerous in the world. More than
2,600 were killed in the country's collieries last year, according to
official data.
If the trapped workers are not rescued, the accident in Xiangning
county will be the deadliest in China in more than four years.
In November 2005, 171 workers died after an explosion in a mine in
the country's northeast.
Investigations so far have shown that 261 workers were in the
Wangjialing pit as water started to gush in - 108 were brought to
safety, but 153 were still trapped underground, the nation's work safety
administration said.
"I was so scared as I couldn't go forward anymore. Luckily there was
an alleyway behind me... I just ran up from there, without thinking, and
the water was chasing me," survivor Fan Leisheng told state television.
"To survive down there around 1,000 metres underground would be very
lucky."
A preliminary probe showed that water that had accumulated in nearby
abandoned pits leaked into the new mine where the workers were located,
it added.
Dozens of police cars and ambulances were parked at the mine, which
belongs to the state-owned Huajin Coking Coal company and covers an area
of 180 square kilometres (70 square miles), an AFP journalist saw.
AFP's reporting team was later asked to leave the premises.
The company itself is half owned by China National Coal Group Corp,
the second largest coal producer in the country and the parent of Hong
Kong-listed firm China Coal Energy.
"Most of the trapped are migrant workers from Shanxi, Hebei, Hunan
and Guizhou provinces," a rescuer was quoted as saying by Xinhua news
agency, referring to areas across a swathe of central China.
Xiangning, Monday, AFP |