Top

Rescuers in 'all-out' bid to save 20 in China mine accident

Rescuers were working around the clock to search for 20 miners who are still trapped since nearly 24 hours.

Beijing: Rescuers were racing against time to save 20 workers who were trapped after an explosion rocked a coal mine near China's Chongqing city, killing at least 13 miners.

State-run Xinhua news agency had last night reported that 15 workers had been killed but revised the toll on Tuesday to 13 with 20 still missing.

Rescuers were working around the clock to search for 20 miners who are still trapped in the colliery in southwest Chongqing Municipality since nearly 24 hours following a gas explosion, the report said.

Altogether 33 miners were stranded in a pit of Jinshangou Coal Mine in Yongchuan District after the explosion went off at 11:33 am on Monday.

As of midnight, rescuers had retrieved 13 dead bodies, but the remaining 20 were still unaccounted for, Chongqing's deputy mayor Mu Huaping told a press briefing.

The official corrected previous casualty reports provided by the local coal mine safety authorities.

"We are still working all-out to search for the 20 missing miners and will exert our utmost as long as there's still a ray of hope," he said.

More than 400 rescuers have been working overnight, taking turns to go down the shaft for the search and rescue operation.

They needed to dig through the underground passageways, some of which had been blocked by ruins from collapsed tunnels, carefully avoiding secondary disasters. At least 20 ambulances and dozens of medical workers are standing by for first-aid.

When the explosion went off, 60-year-old Tao Puzhang was working on his land about 500 meters from the mine.

"I heard a bang and felt the ground was shaking under my feet," he was quoted as saying

Liu Fuxiu, a winch operator with the mine, was working 40 meters from the entrance to the pit.

She was swept away by strong shockwaves following the explosion and was injured on the face and back.

"My injuries are nothing," she said while answering questions from investigators.

"I have a relative down the pit and I hope he will survive," she said.

Altogether 35 workers were in the pit when the accident happened. Two of them managed to escape unhurt.

Following the explosion, Chongqing authorities have intensified a safety overhaul and demanded all collieries with less than 90,000 tonnes of annual output be temporarily closed.

The Jinshangou mine has a designed annual output of 60,000 tonnes, according to its license.

( Source : PTI )
Next Story