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Efforts resume to save 29 trapped Chinese miners
21 Jan 2007 09:53:30 GMT
Source: Reuters

BEIJING, Jan 21 (Reuters) - Rescue efforts resumed on Sunday to save 29 miners trapped for more than four days in a flooded iron ore pit in Inner Mongolia.

The official Xinhua news agency said rescuers were drilling a 30-cm (15-inch) diameter hole to get food and oxygen to the men, who officials believe still have a chance of surviving.

Eleven miners escaped when the mine flooded on Wednesday. Six were rescued the next day and are recovering in hospital.

Rescue operations had to be suspended on Saturday after a sudden rise in the water level in the flooded mine shaft.

Separately, in the northeastern province of Liaoning, rescuers had abandoned efforts to save seven miners trapped in two neighbouring coal mines that flooded 11 days ago, Xinhua said.

The owners of the two pits had agreed to pay compensation of at least 200,000 yuan ($25,000) to the relatives of the victims, Xinhua quoted a local government official as saying.

China's coal mines are the world's deadliest, with 4,746 miners killed in thousands of blasts, floods and other accidents last year.
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A resident stands near the polluted Dongting Lake in Hanshou county, central China's Hunan province, February 2, 2007. The Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) will release a long-awaited report assessing the human link to pollution, global warming and climate change in Paris February 2, 2007. A draft of the report, which draws on research by 2,500 scientists from more than 130 countries, projects a big rise in temperatures this century and warns of more heatwaves, floods, droughts and rising sea levels linked to greenhouses gases released mainly by the use of fossil fuels. CHINA OUT