Reeleak is an alternative to LiveGore, now you can surf and watch LiveGore content directly from Reeleak.
Initially, two were killed with 53 missing. State operated China Central Television indirectly confirmed that all remaining trapped miners were "missing or dead" in March. In June, it indirectly confirmed that they were all dead, bringing the death toll to 53.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2023_Inner_Mongolia_open-pit_mine_collapse
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBig7N6Pvks
This article is more than 9 months old
Mining company operating in autonomous region of Inner Mongolia has history of safety violations
At least six people have died and dozens more are missing after an open-pit coalmine collapsed in Inner Mongolia, an autonomous region in north China.
One of the walls of the mine caved in at about 1pm local time on Wednesday, burying workers in tonnes of rocks and sand. Another collapse occurred five hours later, forcing the rescue operation to halt. The search resumed on Thursday morning, with fireengines, SUVs, bulldozers and rescue dogs being mobilised from across the province.
About 900 government-approved rescue workers were at the scene, and residents in the area had been sent to a neighbouring town. President Xi Jinping called for “all-out efforts in search and rescue” and the maintenance of “social stability”.
An investigation into the cause of the disaster was under way. Drone footage suggested the pile of debris left by the collapse was about 500 metres long.
The mine is operated by Inner Mongolia Xinjing Coal Industry. Last year the company was fined for several safety violations, including insecure routes in and out of the mine and unsafe storage of volatile materials. In June 2022, two workers were found to be working in the mine without the correct certification.
The company has also been involved in hundreds of lawsuits relating to unpaid debts between 2014 and 2022, according to state media. It has yet to issue a statement about the disaster.
Inner Mongolia is one of China’s top three coal-producing regions. Along with Shanxi and Shaanxi, it produces 90% of the country’s coal. In recent years the government has pushed for more output from the industry in an effort to boost GDP and stockpile fuel reserves. Last year China produced a record 4.5bn tonnes of coal, a 9% increase on 2021.
As companies seek to boost productivity and cut costs, accidents remain common. In July a coalmine in neighbouring Gansu province collapsed, killing 10 people and injuring six others.
In recent years the government has put a greater emphasis on the enforcement of safety regulations and forced some smaller mines that lack appropriate safety equipment to close. There were 356 mining accidents in 2021, down from 434 in 2020, according to official statistics.
https://www.theguardian.com/world/2023/feb/23/miners-killed-in-open-pit-coalmine-collapse-in-north-china
Important!
Your post might be deleted/hidden when other users reported/flag it. Think twice with your post title/description/comments, because the content is automatically deleted/hidden by the system. If you need quick action to delete any content in this website, you can click the Report content! button below.
We apologize for the flagged problem encountered, but for your information, every post that is flagged will be assessed as to whether it needs to be deleted or published again, this is to avoid uploading prohibited content. For that, every hidden media will be published again if it does not violate the rules of this site. In addition, posts that are uploaded repeatedly will also be deleted. We would like to emphasize that if your account is found to continue flagging and down-voting posts for no reason, your account will be blocked by the system. If you think the system has mistakenly blocked your account, you can ask us to unblock your account, but it depends on the logs we check based on the mistake you made. We try to be fair to all users, so action must be taken. Any problem can directly contact us through the Feedback form. Thank you for understanding.
- Moderator