Million-yuan fine for mine deaths
25/11/2005 11:58
Coal mines in Xingtai, in north China's Hebei Province, will be fined 1
million yuan (US$12.34 million) for each mine-accident death until the end of
February. The fines are part of a 100-day safety drive launched this week by
the city government. Under the rules, underground non-coal mines face fines
of 500,000 yuan for each death. Firecracker plants and dangerous chemicals
plants will be fined 300,000 yuan for each death in the 100 days. The
measures were promulgated after two recent mine accidents claimed 47 lives and
left four missing in the city. On November 6, a gypsum mine collapsed in
Shangwang village in Xingtai, damaging two nearby gypsum mines, toppling a
two-story building and leaving cracks in the ground. The mishap left 33 dead
and four missing. A flood at 5am last Saturday in Yuanda Coal Mine in Xingtai
trapped and killed 14 miners underground. Apart from the Xingtai Mining
Industry Group, all local coal mines, underground non-coal mines, and
firecracker plants have been ordered to suspend production and conduct safety
checks. Reward offered Mines and plants which cannot meet safety
requirements will be shut, according to a report titled "Decisions on Operation
of Highly Dangerous Enterprises" issued by the government. The decisions
require mines and plants to compensate the families of workers killed at work in
the campaign period. The government has also promised a reward of 10,000 yuan
for anyone who reports an illegal mine or plant operation. Leading Party and
government officials at the city, county and township levels will be required to
resign if a fatal accident occurs in a mine under their
administration. Officials providing electricity, funds, transport or
materials to illegal mines or giving tacit consent to illegal mine operations
will be severely punished. The city has 157 coal mines, 621 non-coal mines,
seven firecracker plants and 198 dangerous chemicals plants. In Shaanxi
Province, the number of deaths in coal mines is 42 percent higher this year than
last year. Accidents in the northwest province's coal mines killed 173 people
by October, the provincial safety watchdog said yesterday. Private coal mines
will be the major targets in a safety check next
month. (Xinhua)
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