Chances ‘slim’ for trapped Tibet miners

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Rescue teams have found the first body almost 36 hours after a giant landslide in Tibet buried 83 mine workers under two million cubic metres of earth, China’s state media has reported.
Xinhua news agency said said on Saturday rescuers “found the first body”, after a huge section of land buried a mine workers’ camp in Maizhokunggar county, east of the Tibetan capital Lhasa, on Friday. The report came after officials said at a press conference aon Saturday that a massive search and rescue operation had failed to locate any survivors or bodies up to that point. A rescue worker had also described the chance of survivors being found as “slim”, Xinhua said, as teams using sniffer dogs and radar combed the mountainside in a hunt for survivors that was hampered by bad weather, altitude sickness and further landslides.
The state-run China Central Television (CCTV) said on Saturday that more than 2,000 rescuers dispatched to Maizhokunggar county in the Tibetan capital, Lhasa, have been searching for the buried.
About 30 excavators were also digging away at the site late on Friday as temperatures fell to just below freezing.
A 3km-long section of land, with a volume of about two million cubic meters of mud, rock and debris swept through the area as the workers were resting and covered an area measuring around four square kilometers, CCTV said. The miners work for a subsidiary of the China National Gold Group Corp, a state-owned enterprise and the country’s largest gold producer.
The reports said at least two of the buried workers were Tibetan, while most were believed to be ethnic Han Chinese.
The landslide came on the same day as a gas blast in a northeast China coal mine which killed 28 people.
‘Natural disaster’: The reports said the landslide was caused by a “natural disaster” but did not provide specifics.
China’s new president, Xi Jinping, who wrapped up a visit to the Republic of Congo in Africa, and Li Keqiang, the new premier, have ordered “top efforts” to rescue the victims, Xinhua said.
Doctors at the local county hospital said they had been told to prepare to receive survivors but none had arrived. “We were ordered to make all efforts to receive the injured,” said a doctor who gave only her surname, Ge, in the hospital’s emergency section. On Saturday morning, a hospital staff member who gave her surname of Wu said it had received no one from the landslide, dead or alive. The Lhasa city government and China National Gold Group Corporation did not immediately answer calls late on Friday. The landslide struck at about 6am local time, but Xinhua’s first news reports about it ran more than 15 hours later.
Mineral resources: Mountainous regions of Tibet are prone to landslides, which can be exacerbated by heavy mining activity. Han Chinese have been increasingly moving into historically Tibetan areas, and many Tibetans in China say their culture is being eroded.
China rejects criticism of its rule, pointing to huge ongoing investment it says has brought modernisation and better standards of living to Tibet.
28 killed in China gas blast

A gas blast in a northeast China coal mine has killed 28 people, the latest incident to damage the industry’s notoriously poor safety record. The official Xinhua news agency cited a spokesman with the provincial work safety and supervision bureau as saying that 13 others were rescued after Friday’s accident at Babao Coal Mine in the city of Baishan in Jilin province. The cause of the accident is under investigation, said the spokesman. The mine is a state-owned colliery under the Tonghua Mining (Group) Co., Ltd, the Xinhua report said. The accident occurred on the same day that a huge landslide came crashing down a mountainside in Tibet, burying 83 workers in a gold mining area, state media said. China is the world’s biggest consumer of coal, relying on the fossil fuel for 70 percent of its growing energy needs. But its mines are among the deadliest in the world because of lax regulation, corruption and inefficiency. Accidents are common because safety is often neglected by bosses seeking quick profits. According to official figures, 1,973 people died in coal mining accidents in China in 2011, a 19 percent fall on the previous year. But labour rights groups say the actual death toll is likely to be much higher, partly due to under-reporting of accidents as mine bosses seek to limit their economic losses and avoid punishment.