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GUIYANG, May 14 (Xinhua) -- A toxic gas burst during an illegal coal mining operation has killed 21 people and injured five others in southwest China's Guizhou Province Thursday, officials said Friday.A total of 31 miners were working in a shaft of Yuanyang Colliery when the accident occurred at about 9:40 p.m. in Puding County, Anshun City. Rescuers on Friday confirmed that 10 people had escaped.The gas burst was triggered by the detonation of explosives for illegal mining, the rescue headquarters said after an initial investigation.The private mine, a combination of three minor collieries, began to improve its infrastructure facilities in 2008 when it received the first of the six necessary mining licenses from the local authorities.Ma Mintang, survivor of the gas outburst, receives treatment in Renmin Hospital of Anshun City, southwest China's Guizhou Province, May 14, 2010. A total of 31 miners were working in a shaft of Yuanyang Colliery in Puding County of Anshun City when a gas outburst occurred at about 9:40 p.m. on Thursday. Rescuers on Friday confirmed that 10 people survived and 21 bodies recovered from the coal mine.Mining was prohibited until the mine passed inspections by authorities and gets the other five business licenses, but the company secretly started mining last year under the guise of shaft maintenance, said Hu Yingze, director of the county coal mining administration.It had illegally produced more than 3,000 tonnes of coal so far, which was, in fact, theft of national resources, he said.Sun Guoqiang, vice governor of Guizhou, blamed county-level authorities for failing to examine the mine."Did anyone of you visit the mine after approving the shaft maintenance project?" Sun asked officials of the county's coal mining administration and work safety watchdog.Rising coal prices had driven the owners to start illegal production as the drought season cut short water supplies for power plants, which had to turn to coal. The market price for coal had risen to about 370 yuan (54 U.S. dollars) per tonne from the normal price of about 300 yuan, said Sun.

BEIJING, May 10 (Xinhua) -- China's Health Ministry on Monday vowed to ban smoking in all its offices in four months, part of an arduous campaign to curb public smoking around the country.Yang Qing, director with the ministry's community health department, told reporters that hospitals, clinics and other medical institutes nationwide should follow suit to impose strict smoking ban by 2011."No Smoking" signs will be placed in the ministry's conference rooms, lavatories, car parks and stairways while a designated smoking area will be set up outside the office building, the official said.He said the ministry also bans its employees from giving tobacco as gifts -- a rooted tradition in China's office culture. Employees who break the ban will be punished, while those who quit smoking in a year can expect cash rewards.Though Yang did not elaborate how hospitals and clinics under the ministry's supervision should go tobacco-free, it is widely believed that similar policies will be imposed soon among the country's medical institutes.Data from the ministry show China has more than 350 million smokers, mostly men influenced by a macho culture. Doctors with smoking habit have become a prime target of China's tobacco control campaign.Yang said smoking should be banned in all public venues, workplaces and public transport vehicles by 2011, according to the World Health Organization Framework Convention on Tobacco Control, which took effect in 2005.It was signed by the Chinese government in 2003 and ratified by the country's top legislature in 2005. National and local governments ramped up anti-smoking campaigns in recent years, but these were not effective as expected because no strict laws are in place, observers said.Yang said the ministry is now coordinating with the country's lawmakers to push for such legislation.
BEIJING, March 31 (Xinhua) -- The Chinese central government on Tuesday pledged more support for Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in achieving prosperity and stability.At a meeting on the development of Xinjiang, in Beijing on March 29 and 30, Vice Premier Li Keqiang and senior leader Zhou Yongkang called for collaboration between central ministries, designated provinces and municipalities and Xinjiang's regional government to build the region into a moderately well-off society in the next decade.Xinjiang's development and stability was at a critical moment, Li said. National support for the region would be instrumental in its development and essential to its long-term peace and order.A meeting on the development of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region is held in Beijing, capital of China, on March 29 and 30, 2010. Chinese Vice Premier Li Keqiang and senior leader Zhou Yongkang, also members of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, called for collaboration between central ministries, designated provinces and municipalities and Xinjiang's regional government to build the region into a moderately well-off society in the next decade.He asked officials to establish an effective mechanism for providing personnel, technological, managerial and financial support, while improving livelihood issues like housing, employment and education, as priorities.Li, also a member of the Standing Committee of the Political Bureau of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, said the government aimed to fully launch the support project in 2011 after a year of research, planning and personnel training, and planned to achieve remarkable results for major tasks in five years.
GUIYANG, May 14 (Xinhua) -- A toxic gas burst during an illegal coal mining operation has killed 21 people and injured five others in southwest China's Guizhou Province Thursday, officials said Friday.A total of 31 miners were working in a shaft of Yuanyang Colliery when the accident occurred at about 9:40 p.m. in Puding County, Anshun City. Rescuers on Friday confirmed that 10 people had escaped.The gas burst was triggered by the detonation of explosives for illegal mining, the rescue headquarters said after an initial investigation.The private mine, a combination of three minor collieries, began to improve its infrastructure facilities in 2008 when it received the first of the six necessary mining licenses from the local authorities.Ma Mintang, survivor of the gas outburst, receives treatment in Renmin Hospital of Anshun City, southwest China's Guizhou Province, May 14, 2010. A total of 31 miners were working in a shaft of Yuanyang Colliery in Puding County of Anshun City when a gas outburst occurred at about 9:40 p.m. on Thursday. Rescuers on Friday confirmed that 10 people survived and 21 bodies recovered from the coal mine.Mining was prohibited until the mine passed inspections by authorities and gets the other five business licenses, but the company secretly started mining last year under the guise of shaft maintenance, said Hu Yingze, director of the county coal mining administration.It had illegally produced more than 3,000 tonnes of coal so far, which was, in fact, theft of national resources, he said.Sun Guoqiang, vice governor of Guizhou, blamed county-level authorities for failing to examine the mine."Did anyone of you visit the mine after approving the shaft maintenance project?" Sun asked officials of the county's coal mining administration and work safety watchdog.Rising coal prices had driven the owners to start illegal production as the drought season cut short water supplies for power plants, which had to turn to coal. The market price for coal had risen to about 370 yuan (54 U.S. dollars) per tonne from the normal price of about 300 yuan, said Sun.
来源:资阳报