Six miners died in a coal mine gas surge in central China's
Hunan Province at the weekend.
Twelve miners still missing in the accident are feared to have
suffocated to death.
A local official said yesterday that the missing workers were
unlikely to have survived despite the ongoing rescue efforts which
have been going on round the clock.
The methane gas surge happened at 5 pm on Saturday in Dayuan
Coal Mine of the province's Longhui County when 24 miners were
working underground. Six miners were saved.
"The amount of gas is too much and those missing miners were
probably suffocated to death," said the head of the county's coal
industry bureau, surnamed Huang.
"There is no hope of survival." He said the mine was full of
methane gas and rescue efforts had been difficult.
The mine has about 150 miners and an annual mining capacity of
20,000 tons.
Huang said his county has nine such small coal mines, and
claimed they had all met the central government's standards for
work safety.
However, the highest safety watchdog has not been satisfied with
the province's efforts in closing up small-scale mines, which are
blamed for frequent disasters because of poor safety equipment.
Recently, safety inspection teams headed by Li Yizhong, minister
of the State Administration of Work Safety, found that a large
number of small mines in the province did not meet the national
work safety standards.
Many local officials are believed to have been working to help
protect the illegal pits from being closed.
"Frequent examinations should be made on collieries that have
been asked to shut down and those that were required to enhance
safety measures," said Li.
Recently, the provincial government has agreed to close more
than 400 coal mines in Hunan. The central government has decided to
close 12,900 small coalmines across the country within the next
three years.
(China Daily February 27, 2006)