Houston Community News >> Chinese Mine Flood Traps 181
8/18/2007 BEIJING (AP) —
Floodwaters from heavy rains poured into two coal mines in a town in eastern
China, leaving 181 miners trapped and feared dead, government officials and
state media said Saturday.
There was no word on whether there was any sign of life in the mines or when
rescuers might enter them. Two high-speed pumps reportedly were being rushed in
to drain the flooded shafts.
A dike on the Wen river in Shandong province broke Friday afternoon, sending
water gushing into a mine run by the Huayuan Mining Co. in the city of Xintai
and trapping 172 miners, the Xinhua News Agency reported.
Work areas were submerged and the miners “had only slim chances of survival,”
Xinhua said, citing Wang Ziqi, director of Shandong's coal mine safety agency.
There was no indication whether rescuers had any sign the miners were alive.
Friday night, nine more miners were trapped when floodwaters poured into
Xintai's Minggong Coal Mine, Xinhua and China National Radio reported.
A mine employee reached by phone said the water came from a small river nearby,
not the Wen dike break. He would give only his surname, Pan, and said he had no
details on the status of rescue efforts.
An employee who answered the phone at the national mine safety agency said he
had no additional information and refused to give his name. Calls to the
Shandong mine agency were not answered.
Rains that swept through on Friday and Saturday dumped more than nine inches of
rain on the area, Xinhua said.
In the Huayuan mine, a total of 756 miners were working at the time of the
disaster and 584 escaped, Xinhua said.
On Saturday, about 2,000 soldiers, police and miners were trying to close the
175-foot-wide gap in the dike on the Wen, the agency reported. It said water was
more than six-feet deep at the breech.
The directors of China's industrial safety and coal mine safety agencies rushed
to Xintai from Beijing to oversee rescue work, the report said.
The disasters came as rescuers in Utah suspended the search for six coal miners
trapped since Aug. 6 by a cave-in. Authorities announced the suspension Friday
following a tunnel collapse that killed three rescue workers.
China's coal mines are the world's deadliest, with thousands of fatalities each
year in fires, floods and other disasters. Many are blamed on managers who
disregard safety rules, fail to install required fire-control equipment or push
miners to dig far more coal than the mine's license allows.
The government has promised for years to improve mine safety.
Authorities offer rewards to whistle-blowers who expose problems, prosecute
officials who collude with unscrupulous mine bosses, and have ordered thousands
of small pits closed.
But China depends on coal for most of its electric power, and the country's
economic boom has created voracious demand. Production has more than doubled
since 2000.
China's deadliest reported coal mine disaster since the 1949 communist
revolution was an explosion that killed 214 miners on Feb. 14, 2005, in the
Sunjiawan mine in Liaoning province.
(Contributed by AP)