Coal mine blast leaves 96 missing (AP/China Daily/Xinhua) Updated: 2005-12-07 20:43
Mine death toll could rise to 171
The number of miners working underground on Sunday night when an explosion
ripped through a coal mine in this Northeast China city was put at 241
yesterday, up from the 221 previously announced.
A rescuer carries a miner trapped in a coal mine blast in Qitaihe, in
northeast China's Heilongjiang province, November 28, 2005. [Reuters]
That means the death toll in the Dongfeng Coal Mine blast could rise to
171 instead of an earlier estimate of 151.
Two mine officials have been detained by police for alleged dereliction of
duty Ma Jinguang and Chen Zhiqiang, head and Party secretary, respectively, of
the State-owned coal mine.
Ironically, Ma was declared a role model in mine management just 10 days
before the accident.
The rescue headquarters gave the latest figures at a press conference, saying
they were the result of "thorough checks" after police got involved in the
investigation.
Till last night, 159 miners were confirmed dead in the colliery while two
women workers working in an above-ground generator room were also killed in the
coal-dust explosion.
Ten miners are missing and hopes of their survival are fading, said
officials.
Relatives of the trapped miners wait in tears outside the mine after a
blast accident occured at Dongfeng Coal Mine in northeast China's Heilongjiang
province November 28, 2005. [newsphoto]
"The information announced tonight resulted from intensive investigation
by the police," said Zhang Chengxiang, director of the Heilongjiang Provincial
Bureau of Work Safety.
He said the mine has "serious problems" in its management.
The blast occurred at 9:40 pm on Sunday at Dongfeng Coal Mine run by the
Qitaihe branch of the Longmei Mining (Group) Co Ltd in Heilongjiang Province.
Seventy-two miners were rescued.
|