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The fate of China's miners

The fate of China's miners

XINTAI, China (AP) -- A quick outburst of violence by relatives of 172 + h- K) h1 y# O; T
miners trapped in a flooded coal mine brought a tearful promise of Chinese
2 a/ Y  f: n4 Z' ]) R% lgovernment action Monday, even as state media said the miners' chances for
8 S$ M; t1 h3 ]. r, _/ vsurvival were dwindling.
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: V6 P- n- H! [  A: F, i- U% @0 eSeveral mines in the hilly eastern China area said worries about flooding / ]( w; v! c: u' s7 @7 Q
caused them to shut down Friday morning, raising questions about why the " N7 g8 }4 M2 M
Huayuan Mining Co. continued to operate. A dike collapsed later that day, ( g4 D, a" ^! S$ G3 I. e6 e
flooding the Huayuan mine and stranded the 172, as well as nine others in a   k! n) d+ a6 X% [9 {  J
smaller mine run by another company.
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8 ^3 I1 _0 h: }; x' V! H5 ]) UWater levels fell slightly in the 2,800-foot deep Huayuan mine Monday as " @/ i6 W# `+ M! h- q' C
industrial pumps began pulling off water, an expert involved in the effort ! t! y! m0 R8 W/ A: @# h5 o' l- ]
said. Even so, the government's Xinhua News Agency said hopes of finding 5 Q& {* \/ e3 w' _: ]5 V# f3 R: C4 {
survivors were fading.
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. ]2 a$ L# x4 l: b9 e. y6 kAlready high tempers among the miner's families boiled over Monday, after 5 I& o0 P' C- U9 k+ d
spending four anxious days without word from the privately owned Huayuan or
' N4 m) p. {5 N, ^* [( `! H  N; hgovernment officials about the rescue efforts./ n$ o" N; `; o6 D3 l% k
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Two brothers of a missing miner and his grown son, frustrated that an
) b9 X  F8 n0 ^' ?4 S+ Rearlier request for a briefing had not been met, and two other men smashed a
/ o0 }$ ]' Q  R2 S+ |* ?reception window and display cases at company offices with wooden sticks. 2 h' P( \2 g' v; I6 x; @
They then rushed around the corner into the sprawling Huayuan compound,
! H$ k$ G' h! W& V6 Ifollowed by five other relatives.* i- `3 e7 R! r$ i3 J7 y! G7 _
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Barred by police and security guards from entering the main administration 9 t; ^9 U+ C# u4 p4 n. W
building, they staged a sit-down protest demanding regular briefings on the * {2 x& p- h* f# Q& F! F. E
rescue.
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  g4 Q" C# J* K7 \4 O; b% W"Why does the whole world know what's going on, but we people right here don
, }, J) y5 {( u9 E: T't? We have to get on the Internet to find out," said Zhang Chuantong, one ! ?) \3 i* H9 r" k. F' P9 y
of the brothers. Watch as grief turns to anger »
  |+ p$ Z2 V* }6 n$ t& e1 d0 Q
& y6 a8 l+ h) F+ XAfter days of seeming official indifference, a vice governor of Shandong, 8 S, Q7 v. a3 _, H
the eastern province where the mine is located, came out and met with them.' U: G9 ^3 |2 T/ P
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"Our hearts are as sad as yours," Vice Governor Wang Junming said, crying as! M  M( }3 \/ F  L5 ^2 N
he spoke. He promised them the government would be more responsive.' b) `4 `! j, g- k' w
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Large-scale accidents like the mine flood present a test for the communist
4 E3 R2 m( k! t, Rleadership under President Hu Jintao to prove it can deliver on pledges to   A) Z9 U$ I8 [# t0 G
improve the lives of farmers and workers. The coal industry is a particular 1 U/ }5 ~' O' _8 S1 d
challenge. Accidents kill an average of 13 miners a day, yet coal feeds most
% ~6 j# k% w$ Y% K" \6 P, u" ~1 }of the country's energy demands.
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In the accident's wake, family members have raised questions about Huayuan's& Y% G$ o% s  o  W
management, especially whether enough attention was paid to safety.6 j5 q, {% F0 s. b4 ]9 t9 J

" A( A" X8 ?8 `2 ?) x' WAfter unusually heavy rains lashed the area around the small city of Xintai,5 E, ^) }4 [/ {6 [9 y; @
370 miles southeast of Beijing, last week, at least two other mines stopped! p$ k0 a- y8 t' r$ w
production Friday, hours before the Wen River smashed through the dike at 2
' f0 F5 U3 Y8 W5 |. ^1 u5 w' C:30 p.m. (0630 GMT).: s9 {+ J) ]* U4 g0 s) T& G

% U+ [0 ~6 |2 V5 [- _# r, iEmployees at the state-owned Xintai Wenhe Coal Mine and the Xintai Hanzhuang
1 _  ^" ^; r( e/ i' o3 \% i. y5 XCoal Mine said workers were either kept out or ordered back to the surface - K, b( W: ^* C. ]: H5 f8 G! ^" v: k
out of safety concerns.+ w) x: D5 G) D/ ]/ A+ z6 A
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"We suspended production from 8 a.m. (0000 GMT) on August 17 because we
+ ^5 y6 f& o1 N/ b" qnoticed a warning given by an expert on the night of 16th that the water
& F; f  t/ }8 ]4 o8 v6 J/ Llevel of the river had risen too fast," said a man in Xintai Wenhe's 0 p3 W4 s3 ?3 D5 F
administrative office, who gave only his surname, Wang.
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Phone calls to several other coal mines in the area and to the Xintai coal . _6 {& M3 f1 o4 O  y/ q
mine safety bureau were not answered. Huayuan executives could not be * t( x# Q, \4 R4 w+ n3 ~" i3 |' a
reached for comment.
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Wang Dequan, a government official in the city of Tai'an, which oversees
1 |' p* f; B$ y+ J8 wXintai, said, "Smaller mines stopped work during heavy rains because they
; U+ w& F" a+ |1 elack the safety equipment that larger mines like the Huayuan mine have.", R, C$ Y% S) s3 a5 T- F, K9 D- f
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In one of the first accounts of the accident, a miner said he was 2,300 feet
5 P5 n# T% P0 H8 q9 Y" pdeep in the shaft at turnaround for the tracked carts that transport miners
' R6 }. a! C; G+ ?& h: Gwhen a warning came over the mine's phone system about the breach. Wang 3 ^3 b2 A2 N/ h4 ^
Kuitao said he rushed down about 600 feet and saw water rushing so quickly
, F5 ?  `- k3 Z: a, M; o+ \7 ^; hit could sweep people away., ]  y2 s1 O2 _$ [" u; U% J" _

7 \+ f7 y2 C/ _2 _. H"The sound was so great you couldn't hear what anyone was saying," Wang said# x' z& ]( m1 s0 p  r# c& h
at a government-arranged news conference. He said he stayed in the mine for# V, W# {  P$ R4 O- F! m
five hours helping others to the surface.
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9 U8 Q) Z$ ?* X1 {' K8 l% _8 eWhile rescue officials have given no indication if any of the trapped miners: l6 T+ i: y: b
are still alive, one expert said their approximate location is known.
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  a$ f- W6 R- s" x3 _4 B"We've determined the general location of the miners, the general area.
! Z" O! C: c4 ?5 O! [& ^There's still some hope," said Bu Changsheng, a water engineering expert.4 i, Y1 ]9 a8 {. I# o  N3 {/ a* @- \

$ d/ _% ?+ {; N, f3 E, y# e% HIn trying to tamp down the anger of the miners' families, Huayuan and the ! E0 d* w( H- v# Z; ]) ?, x
government have used a combination of appeals and threats. Family members
( K3 h+ I. G/ W0 f3 {said they were warned to wait at home and not to talk to the media.+ c4 N' u& A- v- o+ e
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One woman, whose husband is believed to be among those trapped, said she was! ?& M& t% G" Q+ \& J
given the warning by two company officials at apartment Sunday and told her
1 ?0 V# z; l: a0 dto wait at home.* |7 X: ?! i1 k" h

$ E( ~" X3 G/ O) @6 k: U, x"The company sent people over yesterday to tell us not to go out and not to   c* \+ }# I* L. U& I+ ?
talk to other people about the situation," said the woman, who asked not to ; c& J" t+ p% {8 e: x$ }- `- _' z
be identified for fear of retaliation. "They did not give us any explanation
* L9 |3 ?" L& ~6 A( E% ?. They just told us to stay at home."
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Fewer family members gathered in an alleyway leading to a company gate than
& I3 s; ~  Y4 C  H$ T+ Pthe dozens who massed there over the weekend. By Monday morning, it was hung/ }6 a, {' s. ?' D7 S9 h$ n
with banners expressing sympathy.
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" e+ b* S9 u" V. [8 h/ dOne read: "Nature has no sympathy, people have sympathy, but the Communist
. c( |- O0 n+ e+ jParty is the most sympathetic."
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