Three bodies found, but scores buried by landslide at Myanmar jade mine
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[December 23, 2021]
(Reuters) - Myanmar rescuers found
two more bodies at a jade mine on Thursday after an official conceded
there was little hope of finding survivors among scores of people buried
by an avalanche of dirt and rubble while searching for fragments of the
gems.
Many were swept into a lake below by the landslide of mining waste,
prompting a desperate search by volunteers and workers in hard hats
aboard rubber boats.
Two more bodies were found on Thursday morning taking the confirmed
death toll at the mine in the Hpakant area to three, Pyae Nyein, captain
of Hpakant Township's fire department, said.
"We are continuing the search. So far no one has survived," Pyae Nyein
told Reuters. Earlier, he said that around 50 people still unaccounted
for had likely also died.
Kachin Network Development Foundation, a civil society group involved in
the rescue operation, estimated the number missing at around 80, while
the Myanmar Now news portal cited sources as saying as many as 100 may
be buried under mining waste.
"In incidents like this, bodies usually only turn up four to seven days
later," Myanmar Now cited Min Naing of the Thingaha group, another
volunteer body, as saying.
Deadly landslides and other accidents are common in Hpakant, the centre
of Myanmar's secretive jade industry which draws poor workers from
across Myanmar in search of gems mostly for export to China.
In a landslide last weekend, media reported at least six people were
killed and in July last year more than 170 people died in one of the
worst disasters in Hpakant after mining waste also collapsed into a
lake.
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Rescue operation takes place after a landslide at a jade mine in the
Hpakant area of Kachin State, Myanmar December 22, 2021. Myanmar
Fire Services Department/Handout via REUTERS
Economic pressures due to the COVID-19 pandemic have drawn more
migrants to the jade mines even as conflict has flared since
Myanmar's military seized power in a coup in February.
The ousted government of Nobel Peace laureate Aung San Suu Kyi had
pledged to clean up the industry when it took power in 2016, but
activists say little has changed and that the coup has likely made
the situation worse.
Myanmar produces 90% of the world's jade. Most comes from Hpakant,
where rights groups say mining firms with links to military elites
and ethnic armed groups make billions of dollars a year.
"The military coup has torpedoed hopes for urgently-needed reforms
for Myanmar’s jade sector," Hanna Hindstrom, senior campaigner at
advocacy group Global Witness, which has investigated the jade
industry, said in a statement.
(Reporting by Reuters Staff; Writing by Ed Davies; Editing by
Michael Perry)
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