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Tragic mine explosion adds to Chinas grim toll of death
and destruction
By John Chan
2 December 2004
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A huge gas explosion at the state-owned Chenjiashan Coal Mine
in Tongchuan city in Shannxi province on Sunday is the latest
tragic disaster in Chinas notorious mining industry. Of
the 293 workers working underground at the time, only 127 escaped45
were hospitalised, including 11 with serious injuries.
After three days of frantic rescue efforts, officials ruled
out any hope of finding the 101 missing men alive and put the
death toll at 166. It may take days before the remaining bodies
are retrieved, as dangerously high gas levels and the risk of
further explosions have hampered rescue workers.
Regional coal industry chief Hou Shichang told a press conference
yesterday: In an environment with a high density of coal
gas and carbon monoxide, it is impossible that the miners still
trapped underground can survive. The terrible death toll
makes the disaster the worst in the coal industry in recent years.
The announcement provoked an angry reaction from relatives
and fellow workers who marched to the government office of the
local Miaowan township where a rescue command centre had been
set up. When officials refused to meet with them, 40 or 50 of
the protesters stormed the building, smashing windows and breaking
office furniture and equipment.
Yan Mangxue told Agence France Presse (AFF): Theyre
very angry. They havent seen their loved ones dead or alive...
They want to beat anyone in sight... The situation is very dangerous.
Local police and a unit from the armys Peoples Armed Police
were dispatched to break up the demonstration.
The protesters blame the mines management for the disaster,
pointing out that a fire had taken place in the shaft the previous
week and that gas densities in the mine remained dangerously high
even after it had been put out. If they had stopped production
and ventilated the shaft to reduce the gas density, the Sunday
explosion would not have occurred, a village party official
told the China Daily.
The accident was not the first. A similar disaster occurred
at the Chenjiashan mine just three years ago in which 38 people
were killed and 16 injured.
Family members spoke to the Chengdu Wanbao newspaper.
A 66-year-old retired miner Qian Wenjiu said both his sons had
been killed in the same mineone in 2001 and his oldest son
in the latest accident. Underscoring the managements lack
of any compassion, he explained that last time the company paid
only 1,500 yuan (about $US180) as compensation. I guess
it will be no different this time, he said.
Wang Xiaoling who was waiting for news of her husband was crying
and had fallen unconscious several times. She told the newspaper
that her husband was a contract worker. We have been married
eight years and have three childrenthe oldest is 8 and youngest
is only 8 months. Now who is going to look after us? she
asked.
The latest tragedy provoked considerable public outrage. Despite
the countrys heavy Internet censorship, more than 2,000
messages were sent to Sina.comChinas major Internet
news portaldenouncing the governments indifference.
Accidents like this, one declared, make the lives of Chinese
people seem cheap. Others criticised the lack of official
inspections.
The mine explosion was particularly embarrassing to Beijing
as it came the day before a showcase conference by the Work Safety
Inspection and Administration Authority. The aim had been to blame
the countrys appalling death rate in mining on the thousands
of small privately-owned and often illegal operations. But the
accident at Chenjiashana major state-owned minemade
clear that the same lack of safety plagues the entire industry.
The Chinese leadership felt compelled to issue orders for urgent
rescue operations and to promise an investigation by a top-level
team appointed by the State Council. The preliminary finding put
the blast down to negligence and greed.
It also confirmed that the mines managers had taken no action
after a fire broke out on November 19, or when gas densities in
the shaft continued to exceed the safety level.
There is every indication, however, that the official investigation
will simply be a whitewash. The Chenjiashan mine management will
be made the scapegoat for the disaster so that the broader responsibility
of the Beijing bureaucracy for the ongoing carnage in Chinas
mines can be swept under the carpet.
As the explosion was taking place at the Chenjiashan mine,
fire fighters had just put out a fire in a coal mine in Fenyi
County in Jiangxi province that had been raging for three days
and killed seven miners. Yesterday, 13 more miners died and another
two are still missing after a mine blast in southwest Guizhou
province.
On November 13, 12 coal miners were killed in a gas explosion
at Pengzhou in Sichuan province. The previous day, another 33
died in a mine blast in central Henan province.
A massive gas explosion in October at a major state-owned mine
at Dapin, Zhengzhou City, in Henan province killed 147 miners.
An official State Council inquiry blamed management for the lack
of proper ventilation. It also ordered the closure of small mines
and the reduction of production levels at larger ones.
These accidents are just the tip of the iceberg. According
to official statistics, 4,153 workers have been killed in coal
mines in the first nine months of the year. The Hong-Kong based
China Labour Bulletin, however, estimates that the death
toll is far higherup to 20,000.
Economic anarchy
Through its free market policies and economic restructuring,
the Stalinist bureaucracy in Beijing is directly responsible for
the terrible death toll in the countrys mining industry.
As foreign investment has flooded into China, turning the country
into the workshop of the world, the demand for electricity
and thus for coal has risen dramatically.
China is now the worlds largest coal producer and consumer,
with production expected to reach 1.9 billion tonnes this year.
Coal remains the main source of electricity in China, accounting
for about 70 percent of its total generating capacity of 440 gigawattsthe
second highest in the world.
However, even with this massive power industry, China is confronting
severe shortages and the worst electricity crunch since 2002.
For the last quarter of this year, the shortfall is estimated
to be 10-13 gigawatts of power. Rail and road transport has been
strained to breaking point to provide coal to power stations and
the mines themselves are under enormous pressure to produce, regardless
of safety concerns.
In the past, investors speculated in manufacturing parks or
export zones. Now local governments and entrepreneurs are eagerly
seeking profits in power production, leading to a rash of new
projects. The Energy Bureau of National Development and Reform
Commission estimates that, without central government approval,
construction is underway on power stations with a total capacity
of 120 gigawatts or 30 percent of last years national output.
As a result of increasing market demand, the price of coal
has jumped 30 percent this year. In a rush to benefit from the
price rises, thousands of small, illegally-operated minespreviously
closed under an earlier safety crackdownhave
reopened. Larger state-owned coal mines companies also ignore
basic safety regulations as management seeks to boost production
to cash in on the demand.
The Chenjiashan mine is a case in point. According to an investigative
reporter with the Chongqing Morning Post, Hu Yong, the
mines director was promised nearly $US50,000 if production
was increased by an extra 400,000 tonnes above the annual quota,
which had been fulfilled by the end of October. That required
an output of 200,000 tonnes a month for the remainder of the year,
as against an average of 180,000 tonnes over the previous 10 months.
If they stopped production due to the fire [last week],
their bonus would be gone, Hu explained.
Beijing insists that by encouraging foreign investment in the
mining sector it can introduce a new safety culture
in the industry. In the first eight months of this year, $13 billion
has been invested in mining but there is no sign of any fall in
the toll of death and injuries. Just as in the sweatshops in the
free trade zones, investors are being attracted to Chinas
mines by the prospect of extracting large profits by exploiting
cheap labour free of restriction and regulation.
More than half of the countrys existing coal mines are
small, privately-owned operations with little modern equipment.
One third of the state-owned coal mines reportedly have old, outdated
facilities. The workforce is often poorly trained and recruited
from nearby villages where people are desperate for a job, even
at the risk to their lives. Officials at the local, provincial
and national levels turn a blind eye to the imposition of safety
regulations to ensure that production and profits keep flowing.
Added to this, some 9,000 of Chinas mines or 30 percent
of the total are officially classified as high-gas densitythat
is prone to explosionand the result is a terrible price
paid by workers. According to official figures released in early
November, 80 percent of the worlds deaths in mine accidents
over the past year occurred in China. The death rate of one per
million tonnes of coal mined is 100 times higher than the US and
30 times greater than South Africa.
The health problems confronting Chinas coal miners are
also appalling. According to official statistics, there are 600,000
miners with lung diseases, and an estimated 70,000 miners are
added to the list every year.
It is farcical to claim, as Beijing still does at times, that
the Chinese economy is in any way socialist. The annual
toll of death and destruction in the mining industry is a particularly
tragic and graphic demonstration that what is taking place in
China is capitalist exploitation in its most naked and brutal
form.
See Also:
Acute power shortages cause
disruptions across China
[27 July 2004]
High death toll continues
in China's coal mines
[28 April 2003]
China's coal mining
deaths spiral
[3 August 2002]
Human carnage continues
in the Chinese coal industry
[11 February 2002]
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