Carbon monoxide poisoning is the cause of nine coal miners'
deaths on Sunday in Gansu Province, officials have said.
Three others were injured in the accident, which happened at
about 5 pm on Sunday in Jingyuan County, located 150 kilometres
northeast of Lanzhou.
The injured and the bodies of the dead miners were brought to
the ground about 2 hours later.
"Two of the three injured were discharged, and one is still
being treated in hospital and has no life threatening problems,"
said Chen Jingsu, an official from the Gansu Provincial
Administration of Work Safety, who was on the scene.
Investigations into the cause of the carbon monoxide poisoning
began yesterday.
The mine, which is State-owned, is licensed to produce 30,000
tons of coal a year. All the appropriate safety documents had been
obtained so that the mine could operate legally, Chen said.
Work-related accidents fall under the jurisdiction of the State
Administration of Work Safety, which announced yesterday that 650
people were killed in 40 "very serious" and "extremely serious"
accidents during the first four months this year.
Speaking at a work meeting yesterday, Li Yizhong, the
administration's head, said that the country's current work safety
situation was steady.
A total of 618 people were killed in 39 very serious accidents
(defined as those in which at least 10 people are killed), the
administration said.
That is three accidents fewer compared with the same period of
2005, and the number of deaths decreased by nearly 40 per cent over
the same period.
The death toll in many high-risk industries declined, notably
the coal mining industry. From January to April, 203 people died in
11 mining accidents.
The number of fatalities is about 64 percent lower than last
year, and the 11 accidents are a decline of 35 percent.
However, Li treated the figures with caution.
"We must keep an eye on any blind optimism and always keep
vigilant."
In the first four months this year, the only extremely serious
safety accident (one in which at least 30 people are killed) was a
blast at a coal mine on April 29, in northwest China's Shaanxi Province, in which 32 miners lost
their lives.
Zhao Tiechui, head of the State Administration of Coal Mine
Safety, said that a nationwide inspection to pin down and resolve
the safety loopholes of the country's coal mines will be conducted
this month.
Zhao also vowed to push forward this year's mission to shut down
illegal small coal mines and regulate the concentration of coal
resources.
In reference to the Shaanxi blast, he also said those held
responsible in the mining accidents would be severely punished.
(China Daily May 9, 2006)