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Coal mine blast kills 23 in north China
(AFP)
Updated: 2006-02-02 16:52

A gas explosion has killed 23 workers in a state-owned coal mine in northern China and more than 50 miners suffered carbon monoxide poisoning.


Bystanders and police gather outside the entrance of another colliery affected by disaster. A gas explosion has killed 23 workers in a state-owned coal mine in northern China and more than 50 miners suffered carbon monoxide poisoning. [AFP]

The powerful blast ripped through the Sihe Coal Mine in Shanxi province at about 7:00 pm (1100 GMT) Wednesday, the Xinhua news agency reported, citing local coal mine authorities.

"Twenty-three were killed," Fan Yongming, an official at state-run Jincheng Mining Group, which runs the mine, told AFP.

At the time of the blast, nearly 700 miners were working underground, and 53 of them were hospitalized with carbon monoxide poisoning, according to Xinhua, which said one was in serious condition.

Eight remained hospitalized Thursday, Xue Junzheng, an official at the mine, told AFP.

Search and rescue efforts in the mine were completed by early Thursday morning, Xinhua reported.

Coal mining production continues to surge and goes on even as the rest of the nation celebrates the week-long traditional Lunar New Year, with the country reliant on coal for 70 percent of its energy needs.

"The miners had had four days off for the Lunar New Year," said Xue. "Wednesday was their first day back at work."

He said the coal mine's ventilation system had been operating throughout the holiday period, and that gas density and equipment had been checked before the miners returned with no problems discovered.

China's national safety administration reported last month that 5,986 workers died in the nation's coal mines in 2005.



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