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Chinas worst mine explosion in more than 60 years
By John Chan
18 February 2005
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At least 212 Chinese coal miners died in a massive gas explosion
at Sunjiawan coal mine near Fuxin City in the northeastern province
of Liaoning on Monday afternoon. Three workers are still missing
despite frantic rescue efforts and hopes for their survival are
diminishing. Another 29 miners were rushed to hospital with burns,
broken bones and gas poisoning. At least 30 traumatised family
members have also been hospitalised.
Some 180 rescue workers tried to reach the trapped miners.
Progress was hampered by freezing night time temperatures, poor
ventilation and high concentrations of gas. The explosion took
place about 242 metres from the surface. By Thursday, most of
the bodies had been retrieved and around 160 had been identified44
were migrant workers from poor rural areas.
Beijing, which has repeatedly promised to improve safety in
Chinas deadly mining industry, is extremely nervous about
the public response to the latest disaster. It is the worst reported
accident in the history of the Peoples Republic of China.
President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao and other senior leaders
have all expressed their concern, ordering whatever
available means be used to rescue the Sunjiawan miners.
Provincial governor Zhang Wenyue and a team of central government
officials reportedly interrupted their Chinese New Year holidays
to supervise rescue operations.
Zhao Yunfu, a local doctor treating the injured, told the China
Daily: I really cant believe it. I thought the
mine had stopped production. The doctor was caught by surprise
because most Chinese workers take a week-long holiday during the
Chinese New Year.
However, like millions of coal miners in China, those at Sunjiawan
could not to take leave. The state-owned mine was under pressure
to produce to meet the countrys surging demand for energy.
The miners had to work or face losing their job.
Fuxin, a city of one million, is part of Chinas northeast
rust belt where the massive restructuring of state-owned
industries in the 1990s resulted in widespread unemployment and
poverty. With few alternatives and little financial assistance,
many laid-off workers have ended up in coal mines. Zhang Qiang,
a local resident, told Associated Press: Mining is just
too dangerous, but its a struggle to find work here.
The government has promised compensation for the families of
the victimsin order to ensure stability of the region.
It fears that the latest disaster, coming less than a month after
a mine explosion in the provinces Diaobing City killed seven
workers, could trigger social unrest. A 400-member taskforce has
been dispatched to the area to placate the families of the dead
miners.
The region has witnessed some of the countrys most militant
struggles in recent years. In February 2000, after three days
of street battles involving 20,000 laid-off miners, armed troops
were sent to Yangjiazhangzi, also in Liaoning, to suppress the
unrest. In March 2002, tens of thousands of workers in the industrial
cities of Daqing, Liaoyang and Fushan staged mass demonstrations
against lay-offs, official corruption and plant closures.
Following the Sunjiawan accident, paramilitary police units
were sent to the area to prevent any protest by the victims
family members and fellow workers. The Central Propaganda Department
issued an order that restricted media coverage to the official
Xinhua news agency. Local residents, however, have managed to
leak out information about the disaster via the Internet and other
means.
A staff member at the mining companys hospital told the
Sound of Hope Radio Network, associated with the Falun Gong movement,
that many of the victims were rural migrants. According to the
hospital worker, mining operations had been outsourced to the
mines directors and supervisors who were making large profits.
Management believed that it was cheaper to pay compensation to
accident victims than to spend money on improved safety.
The state media reported that the cause of the latest explosion
is still under investigation, but it is unlikely that management
will be held accountable. Even before the inquiry was complete,
Zhang Yunfu, the vice general manager of the state-owned Fuxin
Coal Industry Group, which owns the Sunjiawan colliery, tried
to pin the blame on a minor tremour that supposedly
took place 10 minutes before the explosion.
Whatever the exact trigger for the explosion, the underlying
causes of the tragedy lie in the unfettered market forces that
Beijing has unleashed over the last two decades. Workers desperate
for any job are being driven underground to mine coal under appalling
conditions to meet the frenzied demand for energy produced by
a flood of foreign investment into the country.
China is now the worlds largest producer of coal. But
the average output of a Chinese coal miner is just 321 tonnes
a yearonly 8.1 percent of the output of a South African
miner or 2.2 percent of an American miner. As in many other Chinese
industries, it is cheaper to employ large numbers of low-wage
miners than to buy machinery to mine coal more efficiently and
safely. In addition, in order to boost output and profits, basic
safety measures are frequently not implemented.
Some of the worst mine disasters have occurred in recent months.
In November, 166 workers died in a mine explosion in Shaanxi provincefollowing
an accident that killed 148 a month earlier. On December 13, the
day that the State Council held a national conference on safe
production, two mine accidents in the southwestern municipality
of Chongqing killed 8 workers. This occurred just days after another
mine explosion in Yanquanyu County in Shanxi province killed 33.
Mining companies, private and state-owned alike, are killing
thousands of workers every year. The official toll last year was
6,027. Even an editorial yesterday in the official China Daily
had to admit: Something is wrong in the whole industry.
The state must strengthen supervision, and production safety law
must be unswervingly enforcedfor the sake that no more avoidable
accidents occur. Such statements of concern and calls for
action are, however, largely cosmetic.
Since 2002, the Chinese government has had one campaign
to promote mining safety after another. In December, it
announced another package of 51.8 billion yuan ($US6.2 billion)
over the next three years. Even if it actually materialises, this
money, like the billions to help the unemployed or
rural poor, is unlikely to have any significant impact. Mining
companies are notorious for flouting the limited existing regulations
and laws on safety, labour rights and minimal wages.
Chinas worst mine disaster in 1942 also took place in
the countrys northeast, in what was then Japanese-occupied
Manchuria. Officially 1,549 miners died in an accident that was
a direct consequence of the ruthless system of exploitation imposed
by the Japanese rulers. It is an indictment of the present Beijing
regime that it has created a situation in Chinas mines which
finds its only parallels in the barbarities of wartime Japanese
imperialism.
Just one day after Sunjiawan accident, another blast in an
illegal coal mine in Songlin village in south western Yunan province
killed at least 24 miners and injured another 14.
See Also:
Tragic mine explosion
adds to China's grim toll of death and destruction
[2 December 2004]
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