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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: China
Underground explosion adds to China's appalling death toll
in coal mines
By Terry Cook
6 October 2000
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A week after a gas explosion ripped through the state-owned
Muchongguo coal mine in China's southwestern Guizhou province,
the number of deaths is still uncertain as authorities attempt
to conceal the extent of the disaster.
About 244 miners were underground on September 26 at the time
of the blast, some working 200 metres below the surface. Hundreds
of workers are still digging with picks, shovels and their bare
hands to reach survivors after the mine officials ruled out the
use of machines and explosives, saying the conditions underground
were too unstable.
Last Friday the official death toll was 48. Of the 86 miners
rescued, 12 were in a comatose condition. As the rescue work progressed,
mine officials were forced to admit that many men were still missing
and the number of dead could be as high as 160.
According to the Hong Kong-based South China Morning Post,
a doctor at the mining bureau hospital said: Rescuers have
found plenty of bodies but they're keeping them in the mine until
night-time because there are a lot of people gathered around the
mine and officials don't want people to see the bodies.
On Tuesday a further report claimed that another 59 miners
have been located and were being kept alive on rice porridge,
soup and milk poured down to them through a pipe. The extent of
their injuries is unknown. Officials stated that it would be days
before rescuers reach the trapped men.
On Wednesday, officials admitted that the death toll had risen
to 125.
Within hours of the explosion the central government dispatched
Sheng Huaren, the State Economic and Trade Commission Minister,
to the region, saying that he would lead a team to organise the
rescue operation and carry out a full investigation.
The real concern of the Stalinist bureaucracy in Beijing is
to minimise the political fallout from the mine explosion. Already
a campaign is underway to find a scapegoat. Immediately after
the disaster the Beijing-based China Youth News criticised
local officials in Guizhou for turning a deaf ear
to the central government's safety regulations.
The Chinese government has always been sensitive to criticism
of the country's notoriously unsafe mining industry. Up until
1980 the media was forbidden to release figures on mining or other
industrial deaths, and even now the official estimates are a gross
underestimation.
Beijing now acknowledges that thousands of miners are killed
each yearthe average annual figure is higher than the total
number of workers killed in coal mining accidents throughout the
rest of the world. According to the State Coal Bureau's newspaper
the China Coal News, 665 coal miners were killed in the
first quarter of this year, and 136 miners died in Guizhou alone
between mid-July and mid-September in 20 separate accidents. Of
these 18 were caused by methane gas explosions.
In the first nine months of 1999, 3,464 miners lost their lives
and a total of 7,423 were killed in 1998. Thousands more fatalities
go unreported in the country's smaller mines.
But miners are not only killed in accidents. A less publicised
figure reveals that 10,000 miners perish every year from lung
diseases caused by poor ventilation systems. The lack of ventilation
also means that methane gas can build-up creating highly volatile
conditions in China's gaseous mines.
This year the central government has promised to improve mine
safety and tighten up regulations. It has threatened to sack the
managers of mines where accidents occurbut only if more
than 10 workers are killed. Little else has been done. Under conditions
where it is closing down mines and privatising the country's mining
industry the government is not about to spend the large amounts
of money needed to provide even basic safety standards.
At present there are a few thousand qualified inspectors to
monitor safety standards in more than 200,000 mines. Most mines
lack rudimentary fire fighting and safety equipment and have no
funds to purchase them.
Beijing is attempting to blame the high number of deaths on
the small unregulated and unlicensed coal mines that have sprung
up during the last 20 years but some of the worst accidents have
taken place in state-owned mines. The Muchongguo mine, the scene
of the latest disaster, was a fully-licensed, government-regulated
mine.
A mine official told the press that the Muchongguo mine, which
employs 4,000 people, was in dire financial straits. Salaries
for miners have not been paid on time, he said. According
to the Guizhou Daily newspaper, an accident occurred in
the same mine in 1983 killing 84 people.
Far from being concerned about mine accidents, the government
factors deaths in state-owned mines into output targets. In 1999,
the newly established State Bureau for Supervising Coal Mine Safety
allowed large state-owned pits one death for every million tonnes
of coal produced, medium-sized pits were permitted four deaths
for every million tonnes and small mines up to eight deaths per
million tonnes.
Up to June the bureau had shut down 35,000 so-called illegal
or small mines claiming the closures were part of the drive to
eradicate unsafe mining practices. The government's main aim,
however, was to rein in the country's huge coal output, which
threatens to glut markets and undermine profits. Last year China
produced 1.03 billion tonnes of coal or one third of the total
world production.
While cutting back output in small mines, the bureaucracy is
also attempting to drive up productivity in other mines to provide
cheap coal for electricity production and other industrial needs.
Coal-fired power stations account for 70 percent the country's
energy needs.
More accidents and deaths will inevitably taken place.
See Also:
Beijing exploits appalling
safety record to shut mines
[31 January 2000]
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