Rescuers Retrieve China Mine Bodies

In Asia, News Headlines

Rescuers have pulled out the bodies of the last five trapped workers from a colliery in central China, putting the final death toll from the gas blast at 37, the government said.

The State Administration of Work Safety said in a statement that “all 37 victims had been found” in the mine in Henan province’s Yuzhou city.

A total of 276 miners were at work below ground when the accident happened early Saturday, and 239 made it to the surface.

Since then, hundreds of rescuers had been working to find the missing, believed to have been 50 to 80 metres below the pit entrance at the time of the incident, but heavy coal dust slowed their progress.

Du Bo, deputy director of the rescue operation, said the missing miners were likely to have been buried in the more than 2,500 tonnes of dust that smothered the pit after the blast.

Last year more than 2,600 miners died in job-related accidents, according to official data – about seven people a day. But independent labour groups say the actual number of deaths was probably much higher.

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