China probing mining tragedy that killed 82
BEIJING – Unmarked tunnels, missing trackers and fake doors have been uncovered during an initial probe into the deadliest mining tragedy in China in over 15 years, with the government vowing to leave no stone unturned, state media reported on Tuesday. At least 82 people were killed by a gas explosion late on Friday at the Liushenyu […] The post China probing mining tragedy that killed 82 appeared first on nationnews.com.

BEIJING – Unmarked tunnels, missing trackers and fake doors have been uncovered during an initial probe into the deadliest mining tragedy in China in over 15 years, with the government vowing to leave no stone unturned, state media reported on Tuesday.
At least 82 people were killed by a gas explosion late on Friday at the Liushenyu mine in the coal-rich province of Shanxi in northern China. Two remained unaccounted for with a further 128 hospitalised, state media said.
The blast is the deadliest mining accident in China since 2009, when a gas explosion at the Xinxing Mine in Heilongjiang province killed 108 people.
While the cause of Friday’s incident remains under investigation, the official Xinhua news agency on Tuesday said concealed mining tunnels, falsified drawings and outsourced and unregistered miners, who had not been provided with required life-saving location trackers, were contributing factors to the deadly incident.
The mine, controlled by Shanxi Tongzhou Coal Coking Group, maintained two separate sets of plans and surveillance systems, Xinhua said. One set matched the actual operations while the other was used to deal with official inspections, with some mining areas hidden from regulatory oversight.
Reuters was not able to contact officials from the company, as according to state media they have been detained.
Coal mined from the concealed and unregulated tunnels is not included in the official production figures and went untaxed.
The two sets of plans are known colloquially as “yin-yang drawings”: one kept in the open for inspectors to scrutinise and the other kept in the dark.
Similar profit-driven practices are not uncommon in coal mines across China despite crackdowns, the national mine safety administration has said.
The Liushenyu mine “used wire mesh and woven plastic sacks sprayed with mortar, to make fake doors that looked very much like the rock wall of the mine tunnel,” Xinhua said.
Workers would be tipped off by someone outside whenever inspectors came, and they would shut the fake doors, smear coal ash to blend them in with the rest of the underground passage. (Reuters)
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