Above-ground rescuers are all systems go yesterday in
the effort to save 69 workers trapped deep in a coal mine in Henan Province. The
mine in the province's Shanxian County was flooded on Sunday. The trapped miners
have been in phone contact with rescuers. -Xinhua
The 69 Chinese miners in a flooded coal pit spent a second day trapped
underground yesterday, but were last night safe and in contact with rescuers via
phone.
Rescuers have installed pipes to deliver food and water to the
miners, but were still trying to work out how to propel the supplies down the
shaft, the China News Service said.
"All 69 miners are safe, and their
mood is stable," the news agency quoted a statement by the government's
work-safety administration as saying.
Rescue workers were still trying to
remove mud and sediment from a passage that would allow them to pump more water
out of the mine.
Rescuers are maintaining phone contact with the miners,
who have been trapped in the pit in central Henan Province since Sunday
morning.
Experts are trying to send food and drinking water through the
800-meter-long ventilation pipes to the miners, who were working when the flood
triggered by rainstorms hit the region about 8:40am.
The trapped miners
have not reported any injuries through the fixed-line phone, but asked for food
and water at 3pm yesterday. The area where the miners are trapped is dry and
still has electricity, but ventilation is poor.
Just 33 of the 102 miners
working underground at the time managed to escape the Zhijian Coal Mine, in
Shanxian County, Sanmenxia City, about 200 kilometers west of Henan's provincial
capital of Zhengzhou. The floodwater is believed to have come from a nearby
river.
Hundreds of rescuers, including police, are struggling to prevent
more water entering the shaft, clearing away silt and providing ventilation and
oxygen to the trapped miners.
The state-owned mine was established in
1958. It was designed to produce 210,000 tons a year, but its actual annual
output is 300,000 tons.
Senior officials have arrived at the site to oversee rescue work, including
Xu Guangchun, secretary of the Henan Provincial Committee of the Communist Party
of China; Li Chengyu, governor of Henan; Li Yizhong, director of the State
Administration of Work Safety; and Zhao Tiechui, director of the State
Administration of Coal Mine Safety.
China's coal industry is the world's
deadliest, killing an average of 13 people a day last year. Most of the deaths
occur in small, private and unregulated mines, but large state-run collieries
report much higher death tolls when accidents hit.
At least nine people
were killed in a coal-mine accident in Linfen City in the northern Shanxi
Province on July 5, but the mine's management concealed the accident for nearly
a month, local authorities said yesterday.
The Liziping Coal Mine, in
Xiangning County, Linfen City, was flooded that day, but managers failed to
inform authorities, a spokesman for the Shanxi Provincial Work Safety
Administration said.
The administration learned of the accident after an
anonymous tip-off and immediately started an inquiry into the accident, he
said.
A working team was set up yesterday to investigate those
responsible for covering up the accident.