China coal mine blast kills 35, traps 44

BEIJING — An explosion at an illegal coal mine killed 35 miners in central China’s Henan province today and left another 44 men trapped, the government said.

An initial investigation showed that the mine in Pingdingshan city had been operating illegally at the time, the official Xinhua News Agency said. The mine’s owners have been placed under police surveillance and the company’s bank accounts have been frozen.

The mine, which produces 150,000 tons of coal annually, was undergoing an overhaul and had not been allowed by the city government to resume production, said a local Communist Party spokesman, according to Xinhua.

The pre-dawn explosion happened at pit No. 4, the State Administration of Work Safety said.

A statement on the administration’s Web site did not give a reason for the blast. It said 14 miners fled to safety. There were 93 men working underground at the time, it said.

A staffer surnamed Yue from the Pingdingshan work safety bureau said officials from the government’s work safety office and the provincial government had arrived on the scene.

Calls to the local government and mine operators rang unanswered.

China’s mines remain the world’s deadliest, although the closing of many small, dangerous mines has halved the average number of miners killed to about six a day in the first half of this year. Most accidents are blamed on failures to follow safety rules, including a lack of required ventilation or fire control equipment.

Henan provincial authorities have ordered a safety overhaul at all coal mines, with governments at city and county levels held responsible for safety at all pits in their jurisdictions, according to a circular issued today.

Pingdingshan city ordered all of the city’s 157 coal mines to suspend production for a safety overhaul.

City authorities sent scores of people to take part in the search and rescue operation. Ventilation in most shafts has been restored, Xinhua said.

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