At least 16 people were killed in a coal mine fire Sunday in
southwest China's Guizhou province, local officials said.
The fire broke out at the Shanjiaoshu Coal Mine at around
8:10am (0010 GMT), the Panzhou City government said in a notice posted to its website
on Sunday night.
"It was preliminarily determined that the conveyor belt
caught fire, causing 16 people to be trapped," it added, with no further
details on what was damaged or how the fire began.
Emergency personnel extinguished the blaze and temperatures
at the site returned to normal, but "after preliminary verification, 16
people have no vital signs", the notice said.
The Panzhou City mine is about 3,600 kilometres (2,250
miles) southwest of the capital Beijing.
China – the world's biggest emitter of the pollutants
driving climate change – operates thousands of coal mines, even as Beijing has
pledged to peak greenhouse gas emissions by 2030.
While safety standards in the country's mining sector have
improved in recent decades, accidents still frequently plague the industry,
often due to lax enforcement of protocols, especially at the most rudimentary
sites.
Last year, 245 people died in 168 accidents, according to
official figures.
An explosion at a coal mine in Shaanxi province in northern
China last month killed 11 people, nine of whom were trapped inside. Another
two people managed to make it to the surface before they succumbed to their
injuries, according to state media reports at the time.
In February, a coal mine partly collapsed in the remote and
sparsely populated Alxa League of the northern Inner Mongolia region after a
180-metre-high (590-foot) slope gave way. Dozens of people and vehicles were
buried under a mountain of debris, but authorities did not disclose the final
death toll for months.
It was only revealed in June that 53 people had been killed.
In a sign of that incident's severity, Chinese President Xi
Jinping at the time ordered authorities to "do everything possible to
search for and rescue the missing people... and protect the security of
people's lives and property as well as overall social stability".
Authorities deployed hundreds of personnel and over 100
pieces of equipment as part of the rescue operation, according to local
government statements.
And in December, around 40 people were working underground
when a gold mine in the northwestern Xinjiang region collapsed.
/KN/
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