Ten China gold miners confirmed dead after others rescued; one still
missing
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[January 25, 2021]
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - Rescuers
searching for the remaining workers trapped in a Chinese gold mine after
Sunday's dramatic extraction of 11 survivors found nine bodies, a local
official said on Monday, taking the death toll to 10, with one miner
still missing.
A total of 22 miners working about 600 metres (2,000 feet) underground
were trapped after an explosion at the Hushan mine in Qixia, a major
gold-producing region in China's coastal Shandong province, on Jan. 10.
Eleven were pulled out alive on Sunday after two weeks underground,
including one in a very weak condition whom rescue teams had been unable
to send supplies to.
Yantai Mayor Chen Fei said rescuers kept searching from Sunday to Monday
afternoon and found the bodies of nine miners, state broadcaster CCTV
reported.
That means a total of 10 miners are confirmed to have died, following
the earlier death in the mine of one worker who had lapsed into a coma,
and their remains have been lifted to the surface, Chen said, adding
that one miner was still missing.
The search is difficult and water levels are high, but as long as the
missing worker has not been found the work will not stop, the CCTV
report added.
SUNDAY SALVATIONThe 11 miners freed on Sunday were rescued much earlier
than expected after it emerged that steel pipes in a blocked mine shaft
had prevented debris from falling lower, according to state media.
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Rescue workers help a miner as he is brought to the surface at the
Hushan gold mine after the January 10 explosion trapped workers
underground, in Qixia, Shandong province, China January 24, 2021.
cnsphoto via REUTERS
The air ventilation shaft, which was the most feasible way to bring
up the workers, had been cleared to a depth of 368 metres (1,207
feet), Xiao Wenru, chief engineer for the mine rescue, told the
Xinhua news agency on Monday.
"It is at this location we discovered that there were some steel
pipes supporting the blockage ... there is almost no blockage under
the steel pipes," said Xiao.
Xiao told Xinhua on Sunday there had been a breakthrough in rescue
efforts after clearing some blockages and finding the "cavities
underneath".
The 11 miners were mostly in good condition. Officials had earlier
said they may have to wait another 15 days before they could be
rescued due to a blockage along their intended escape route.
China's mines are among the world's deadliest. The country recorded
573 mine-related deaths in 2020, according to the National Mine
Safety Administration.
(Reporting by Emily Chow; additional reporting by Tom Daly; Editing
by Michael Perry and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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