Chinese
miners hold pipes used for pumping out water from a flooded mine during rescue
operation at a coal mine in Xintai, eastern Shandong province, on August 20,
2007 ©Teh Eng Koon (AFP)
|
The owner of a Chinese
gypsum mine committed suicide Sunday after a cave-in which killed one person
and left 17 trapped, state media said. Ma Congbo drowned himself while he was at the
scene helping the rescue, the official Xinhua news agency said.
Over
700 rescuers are battling to save the workers after the Friday accident in the
eastern province of Shandong, it said, adding that four had managed to escape
and seven more had been pulled out of the mine.
AFP based on Xinhua filings reports:
They
have drilled a hole to try to get to one of the places where the workers are
trapped, and are attempting to bring food and water to them.
Ma
was the chairman of the Yurong company which owned the mine.
Accidents
in Chinese coal mines killed 931 people last year, according to government
data, while figures for all mining accidents were unavailable.
China,
the world's largest producer of coal, says the number of fatalities is
declining. But some rights groups argue the actual figures are significantly
higher due to under-reporting.
Anger
about industrial safety standards is growing after scores of deaths this year,
including this month's landslide in the southern commercial hub of Shenzhen and
a chemical blast in the industrial city of Tianjin in August.
The cause of the gypsum
mine collapse is under investigation, Xinhua said.
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