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China Landslide 'Buries Dozens'

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Saturday, June 06, 2009

A landslide in south-western China has buried nearly 60 people, state media have reported.

Three survivors have been pulled out from under the rocks and two dead bodies found, Xinhua news agency said. Fifty mine workers and nine residents were initially thought buried by the landslide, in an iron-ore mining area of the Chongqing region.

China's mining industry has a poor safety record, with thousands of deaths reported every year. The landslide happened in a mountainous area of Wulong county at around 1500 (0700 GMT), Xinhua said.

The news agency said millions of cubic metres of rock flooded a valley, burying an iron ore plant and six houses in Tiekuang township, and cutting power and communication lines. An official for the Chongqing government said rescue workers, doctors and digging equipment had arrived on the scene. The three injured survivors were taken to hospital in a serious condition, Xinhua said.

It is not clear what caused the accident, but an official with the Chongqing work safety supervision bureau told Associated Press news agency that the landslide did not appear to have been caused by the work at the mine. Accidents in China's mines are common, due to poor safety standards, illegal mining and the rush to feed the demand from one of the world's fastest-growing economies.

Chinese authorities said earlier this year that the number of both mining deaths and accidents fell in 2008.

Xinhua said there were more than 400,000 accidents last year. One of these was a landslide in Shanxi that killed 254 people when a dam holding back waste from an illegal mine collapsed, flooding a community.

Thirty-four officials were dismissed over the incident.