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China coal mine operators ignore closure orders
15 Feb 2007 00:42:15 GMT
Source: Reuters

BEIJING, Feb 15 (Reuters) - Many Chinese coal mines ordered shut by the government for safety reasons are still operating -- some seven years after being told to close -- and accidents are still happening there, a major state newspaper said on Thursday.

The government has taken aim at small coal mines in the last few years as many have few or no safety measures in place, to try to cut the death toll in the world's deadliest mining industry.

Last year, more than 7,000 workers were killed in mine blasts, floods and collapses.

Some owners have been getting round government orders by just "merging" their small mines with other collieries, the People's Daily newspaper said.

Last year, the major coal producing province of Shaanxi was meant to have shut 80 mines, but only closed 44, said the newspaper, themouthpiece of the ruling Communist Party.

The other 36 were still open and "waiting to be reorganised", the report said.

It said that one mine in Hancheng city supposedly closed in 1999 was still operating despite four attempts to close it. A gas explosion there on Feb. 1 killed two people.

Chinese officials have been widely criticised for lax enforcement of safety regulations and colluding with coal mine owners to protect local tax revenues, or even profits from their own shares in the lucrative business.
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An egret flies over the 1,500-hectare Mai Po nature reserve in Hong Kong neighbouring mainland China's southern city of Shenzhen (background) in this November 12, 2004 file photo. As an important nature reserve for migratory birds in the territory, Mai Po is being increasingly polluted and choked up by industrial and organic waste flushed down from southern China, a leading green group said on February 27, 2007. Picture taken November 12, 2004.