China suffers deadliest coalmine disaster since 2009

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Rescue operations are ongoing at the Liushenyu coalmine following a gas explosion.
Rescue operations are ongoing at the Liushenyu coalmine following a gas explosion.

At ‌least 90 people have been killed in a gas explosion at a coalmine ‌in northern China, the country’s deadliest mining accident since at ‌least 2009.

The gas explosion occurred late on Friday at the Liushenyu coalmine in Qinyuan county, Shanxi province, with 247 workers on duty underground, state media Xinhua reported.

The mine is operated by Shanxi Tongzhou Group Liushenyu Coal Industry, which was ‌established in ‌2010 and ⁠is controlled by Shanxi Tongzhou Coal Coking Group, according ​to corporate database Qichacha.

Rescue operations were ongoing and the cause of the accident was under investigation, according to the local emergency management authority in Qinyuan. 

An ambulance after an explosion at Changzhi city's Liushenyu coalmine
The Liushenyu coalmine incident is one of China’s ​deadliest such disasters of the past ‌decade. (AP PHOTO)

Shanxi is China’s coalmining heartland.

President Xi Jinping called for authorities to “spare no effort” in treating ⁠the injured and conducting search and ‌rescue operations, ​while ordering a thorough investigation into the cause of the accident and ​strict accountability ‌in accordance with the law, according to Xinhua.

Premier Li Qiang called for ​timely and accurate release of information and rigorous accountability.

China has significantly reduced coalmine fatalities – often caused by gas explosions or flooding – ​since ​the early 2000s through more stringent ​regulations and safer practices.

In 2009, a ‌coal and gas outburst in Heilongjiang Province killed 108 people and injured 133.

Executives of the company responsible for the mine had been detained, Xinhua reported.

Shanxi provincial authorities had dispatched seven rescue and medical teams totalling 755 personnel ​to the site, the emergency management bureau at Qinyuan said.

Reuters