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Firefighters fight the blaze at the Yongju Coal Industry Joint Building in Luliang city, Shanxi province. Photo: Xinhua

China’s coal hub Shanxi vows thorough probe after mining office fire kills 26

  • Blaze at Yongju Coal Industry Joint Building counts among deadliest workplace accidents in China in recent years
  • China’s coal producers are under constant scrutiny over accidents, often caused by lax safety standards and poor enforcement
The provincial government of China’s coal hub Shanxi has vowed a thorough investigation after 26 people were killed in a fire at a mining company office, in one of the country’s deadliest workplace accidents in recent years.

This came as central authorities launched a sweeping campaign to eliminate safety risks in the mining industry.

“Development cannot come at the price of safety,” the Shanxi government said during their latest meeting on Saturday, saying lives came first and pledging to prevent major accidents.

Officials also vowed to identify those accountable for the deadly blaze at the Yongju Coal Industry Joint Building on Thursday, strengthen supervision of the sector and eliminate safety hazards.

The four-storey building in Luliang housed both offices and dormitories, and was used mostly by miners for showering and holding meetings, the provincial government said.

There were more than 200 lockers in the building and 1,700 baskets holding miners’ equipment, a spokesman said on Friday.

A moment of mourning for the victims ahead of a Shanxi provincial government press conference in Luliang on Friday. Photo: Xinhua

The blaze started during a shift change in the morning, miners told local media.

Some workers back from the night shift were showering, while others were coming up the mine shaft. About 10 workers smashed a window on the fourth floor and climbed down a water pipe to escape.

At least 38 people were injured.

President Xi Jinping, who was in the United States at the time, sent instructions for local authorities to enforce more safety measures and eliminate “hidden risks” in key industries, state media reported.

“It is an extremely profound lesson,” he said, according to state news agency Xinhua.

Local police had detained 13 suspects, the government spokesman said on Friday. All mining firms in Lishi district, the part of the city where the accident occurred, have also been told to suspend production.

The State Council, China’s cabinet, had sent a team to oversee the rescue work, state broadcaster CCTV reported.

The National Health Commission has also sent a team to guide medical treatment of those injured.

China pledges ‘crackdown on cover-ups’ after recent deadly mining disaster

Meanwhile, China’s emergency management minister, Wang Xiangxi, warned of increased fire hazards in the winter as he called for thorough checks in mining industry buildings including offices, dorms and cafeterias. Large shopping malls, restaurants, hospitals, schools and elderly homes should also undergo checks, he said on Friday.

China’s coal producers are under constant scrutiny over accidents, often caused by lax safety standards and poor enforcement.

Public records show that Yongju Coal Industry, owner of the mine connected to the stricken office building, had been punished and fined 11 times from 2017 to 2022 over pollution and safety risks.

Earlier this year, a government investigation team in Shanxi published a report on the Jingcheng Coal Mining Company, where three workers were killed in a shaft collapse in September last year.

The company had hidden 40 production accidents from the authorities since 2007, including the deaths of as many as 43 miners, the report released in July said.

It said the company would contact miners’ families before news of the accident got out and offer to buy their silence with huge rewards.

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