The Fuxin Mining Group has been ordered to halt production at
its eight bases in northeast China for safety inspections after a
gas blast killed 27 people at one of its pits on Wednesday.
All workers were required to take training courses on safety and
labor skills during the suspension, said Li Jun, deputy secretary
of the Party Committee of Fuxin Mining Group.
The Liaoning provincial coal industry administration on Friday
began a general inspection of all eight mining entities
administered by Fuxin Mining Group and demanded production be
stopped until all hidden dangers are removed.
The blast happened at around 8:15 AM Wednesday in the Wulong
Coal Mine, the group's biggest coal production base, killing 27
miners and injuring 36.
The location of the accident was fixed at the work face of No.
331 area, about 900 meters below ground. More than 180 rescuers
were sent down to search for missing miners.
The injured, including 22 with severe burns and other with
respiratory tract injuries, are receiving treatment at two
hospitals.
A special group, led by Jia Bin, chief of Liaoning Coal Mine
Safety Bureau, has been formed to investigate the cause of the
explosion.
The Wulong mine, about 150 km northwest of the provincial
capital Shenyang, had been in operation since 1957 and is capable
of producing two million tons of coal annually.
(Xinhua News Agency July 1, 2006)