Death toll hits 90 in North China colliery blast (Xinhua) Updated: 2005-12-10 13:23
The death toll in Wednesday's colliery blast in Tangshan has climbed to 90
and 18 others are still missing, rescuers said.
The Chinese central government set up an investigation team on Saturday to
see into the accident and oversee the rescue work, a spokesman with the
emergency rescue headquarters told Xinhua.
The deadly blast went off at 3:30 p.m. on Wednesday at the Liuguantun
Colliery in Kaiping district of Tangshan, a city in north China's Hebei
Province. Twenty-nine of the trapped miners have been saved, five of whom are
seriously injured.
More than 150 rescuers are working all-out in search of the missing miners.
Chinese President Hu Jintao, Premier Wen Jiabao, Vice-Premier Huang Ju and
State Councilor Hua Jianmin have given separate instructions demanding every
effort to save the trapped miners.
Earlier reports said 186 miners were working underground when the blast
occurred but a source with the state investigation team said the number was
inaccurate -- as he found 10 miners did not go down the shaft after signing on
the roll book.
The coal mine, formerly state-owned, was privatized in
2002.
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