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THE PITS
Trapped Chinese miners unlikely to survive: Xinhua
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) Sept 2, 2011

Three workers trapped in a mine in northeastern China since it flooded 10 days ago are unlikely to survive the disaster, the state Xinhua news agency said on Friday.

Rescue workers on Tuesday pulled 19 miners from the pit in China's Heilongjiang province, providing a rare good-news story in an industry notorious for lax safety standards that kill thousands of workers every year.

Efforts to rescue the three who remain trapped underground in the illegally-operated mine are continuing, but their chances of survival are slim, Xinhua reported.

Xinhua said the men had been located, citing rescue workers, but it was not clear whether they were still alive. "They have limited room for survival," the agency quoted a rescuer as saying.

Rescue workers continued to pump water out of the mine, which was flooded on August 23 when workers mistakenly drilled into a neighbouring mine that had been filled with water.

Of the 45 miners who were in the pit when it flooded, 19 escaped, four were pulled out on Saturday, one of whom later died, and another 19 were rescued early Tuesday morning.

China's coal mines, which have a dismal safety record, have been hit by a series of accidents in recent years as demand for energy has spiked.

Last year, 2,433 people died in coal mine accidents in China, according to official statistics -- a rate of more than six workers per day.

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Ten dead in China mine accident: state media
Beijing (AFP) Sept 3, 2011 - The bodies of 10 miners have been pulled from a flooded mine in China's southwestern province of Sichuan, state media reported Saturday, adding two more remain trapped underground.

Rescuers are trying to reach the pair, who have been trapped since the mine shaft in the city of Dazhou flooded on Monday when 30 miners were working underground, Xinhua said quoting local authorities.

Eighteen miners escaped the flood.

The mine's owner and the manager in charge of safety have been arrested, the report said citing a spokesman.

It is the latest fatal incident in China's notoriously dangerous mines and follows a report by state media on Friday saying that three workers trapped in a mine in the country's northeast were unlikely to survive.

China's coal mines, which have a dismal safety record, have been hit by a series of accidents in recent years as demand for energy has spiked.

Last year, 2,433 people died in coal mine accidents in China, according to official statistics -- a rate of more than six workers per day.





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THE PITS
China pulls 19 from flooded mine in rare rescue
Beijing (AFP) Aug 30, 2011
Rescue workers on Tuesday saved 19 miners from a flooded Chinese mine where they had been trapped for a week, state media said, in a rare good-news story for an industry in which thousands die each year. The state CCTV television network showed the men being carried out on stretchers from the flooded mine swaddled in blankets, their eyes bandaged as they emerged into the daylight, several sh ... read more


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