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Officers were still visiting various households in the area and interviewing residents for a final tally on the number of people missing or buried, state news broadcaster CCTV said in its midday bulletin. The figure could be known by Thursday's end, said Wang Qingxian, a Shanxi province spokesman cited in the report. A preliminary investigation showed the landslide was triggered by heavy rains that brought down a retaining wall at a waste dump operated by an illegal mine, said Wang Dexue, deputy head of the State Administration of Work Safety. The wall's collapse sent a wave of mud and iron waste over the town, located just below the waste site. The disaster underscores two major public safety concerns in China: the failure to enforce protective measures in the country's notoriously deadly mines, and the unsound state of many of its bridges, dams and other aging infrastructure. There are more than 9,000 mine waste dumps throughout China, and more than half of them operate without work safety permits, the CCTV report said.
[Associated
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