The fate of the 57 miners trapped in a flooded colliery in north
China's Shanxi Province is still not known, a senior
work safety official said yesterday.
Despite nearly a week passing since the flood that trapped the
coal miners, "It is still difficult to predict whether they are
alive or dead," said Peng Yujing, the official in charge of policy
and regulation for the State Administration of Work Safety (SAWS)
at the mine.
More than 100 miners were working in the Xinjing Coal Mine in
Zuoyun County on May 18, when sudden floods filled the tunnels.
Fifty-seven miners were trapped, while 47 were narrowly able to
escape.
There are now six pumps at the site draining a total of 8,000
cubic metres of water every hour, said Peng.
By yesterday afternoon about 11,000 cubic metres had been pumped
out, lowering the water level in the pit by 50 centimetres.
However the drainage process has not been going smoothly due to
the "very complicated" geological situation in the mine and the
high acidity of the flood water which threatens to erode the
pipelines, said Peng.
Nine managers, including mine owner Li Fuyuan, contractor Wang
Sheng and the mine's legal representative Lan Renhe have been
arrested by local police for attempting to cover up the
accident.
Managers first reported that only five people had died in the
flood, only admitting the true number trapped after investigators
flew to the scene.
Meanwhile local town leaders have suspended their normal work
while the investigation into the disaster continues.
The local government has also frozen 11 account numbers in seven
banks connected to the mine, holding funds of about 8 million yuan
(nearly US$1 million), said Peng.
He added that more than 180 family members of 54 of the missing
miners had travelled from 10 provinces to reach the scene of the
disaster.
Initial investigations showed the production output of the mine
had far surpassed the authorized level.
Li Yizhong, head of SAWS, earlier revealed that the colliery was
only licensed to mine 90,000 tons of coal a year, but production
between March 2 and May 18 alone reached 130,000 tons.
He has urged investigators to broaden their probe into possible
official corruption that may have allowed the mine to
overproduce.
He also demanded an investigation into local officials who could
have helped in the initial attempts to cover up the extent of the
disaster.
Meanwhile in neighbouring Henan Province eight people were
killed and one injured in a gas explosion at an illegal coal mine
on Monday night, according to the provincial work safety
bureau.
The blast occurred in the village of Huaipashu in Mianchi
County, just hours after the mine had secretly re-opened after
being shut in a government safety crackdown.
(China Daily May 25, 2006)