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18 confirmed dead in central China colliery fire
January-6-2010

People prepare materials for rescuing miners at the Lisheng Coal Mine in Tanjiashan Town of Xiangtan County, central-south China's Hunan Province, Jan. 5, 2010. Twenty-seven miners were trapped after a fire happened inside the coal mine on Jan. 5. (Xinhua

People prepare materials for rescuing miners at the Lisheng Coal Mine in Tanjiashan Town of Xiangtan County, central-south China's Hunan Province, Jan. 5, 2010. Twenty-seven miners were trapped after a fire happened inside the coal mine on Jan. 5. [Xinhua]


The death toll has climbed to 18 in Tuesday's coal mine fire in central China's Hunan Province, with nine more bodies retrieved early Wednesday.

Rescue work continued Wednesday to search for survivors, as at least nine more miners were believed to be trapped at the Lisheng Coal Mine in Tanjiashan Town of Xiangtan County.

Underground cables caught fire in the mine pit at around 2 p.m. Tuesday, while about 70 miners were working in the shaft. Forty-three of them managed to escape the shaft.

Rescuers retrieved nine bodies at a mining platform in the shaft about 160 meters deep Tuesday night.

At 8:30 a.m. Wednesday, the emergency rescue headquarters said nine more bodies had been retrieved about 540 meters underground.

Rescuers are searching another mining platform, at least 600 meters underground Wednesday, hoping to find survivors.

Experts with the provincial work safety bureau said there were chances for some of the trapped miners to survive, after the fire was put out and the ventilation system restored on Tuesday.