China rescues 29 miners trapped in flooded coal mine

The China miner rescue was good news for a coal mining industry that is still the world's deadliest despite impressive safety improvements in recent years.

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Jiang Hongjing/Xinhua/AP Photo
In this photo released by China's Xinhua News Agency, Liu Mingquan, center, the first miner rescued among the 29 miners trapped underground, gets help from rescue workers at the Batian coal mine in Xiaohe Town of Weiyuan County, southwest China's Sichuan Province, Nov. 22. Emergency crews drained a flooded Chinese coal mine and rescued all 29 trapped workers Monday, ending a daylong rescue drama.

Barefoot and wrapped in white quilts, 29 miners were pulled out of a Chinese coal mine Monday after being trapped by a flood and waiting a day for rescuers to pump out water.

State broadcaster China Central Television showed medics leading out the miners, naked and with their eyes shielded from the light after 24 hours in darkness. Crowds of mine workers, reporters and others cheered as they were taken to ambulances.

Late Monday, all 29 men were in stable condition at a hospital with no serious injuries, Xinhua reported. They may have removed their clothes because wet clothing would have risked hypothermia.

Some 35 miners were initially trapped Sunday morning when waters from a nearby abandoned mine flooded a shaft in the small, privately owned Batian mine in southwest Sichuan province, the official Xinhua News Agency reported. While 13 managed to escape, another seven entered the mine trying to rescue their colleagues and became trapped, the report said.

The trapped workers found dry space about 125 feet (40 meters) below the surface to wait out the rescue while fast pumping by emergency teams cleared the water away, a mine inspector who took part in the rescue said.

"They were trapped down underground just above the leaked water," said the inspector, Bao Xiqiang, with southern Sichuan's Work Safety Bureau. "When the water went down to a safe level, the rescuers and miners were able to wade their way out of the shaft."

CCTV interviewed one rescuer who was wearing a soaked T-shirt and said the water in places was as high as his shoulders.

Workers pumped water from the mine for more than 10 hours, Bao said. Rescuers then walked down a slope about 525 feet (160 meters) and along a flat tunnel for another 1,800 feet (550 meters) to reach those trapped, he said.

The rescue was rare good news for a coal mining industry that is still the world's deadliest despite impressive safety improvements in recent years. It contrasted with the difficult rescue efforts under way in New Zealand, where toxic gas buildup has kept rescuers from entering a coal mine to reach 29 workers three days after an explosion.

China counts on coal to meet nearly 70 percent of its energy needs, and with the economy growing at about a 10 percent rate, demand and prices for coal are high, encouraging mine owners to ramp up production.

The Batian mine was not producing coal at the time of the accident, but work crews were inside the mine preparing to increase annual capacity from 50,000 tons to 60,000 tons, Xinhua reported.

Though most of China's mining accidents occur in small, illegal mines, Xinhua quoted Lin Shucheng, chief of the provincial work safety bureau, as saying Batian's operation was legal and fully licensed.

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