A Chinese Cabinet minister sought yesterday to portray a mining accident that left 181 miners trapped and presumed dead as a natural disaster, deflecting criticism that more could have been done to save the workers.
The miners -- 172 in a mine belonging to the Huayuan Mine Co and nine in a smaller nearby mine -- have been trapped since Friday afternoon when heavy rains undermined a river dike.
But questions have been raised about why Huayuan sent miners into the nearly 1,000m-deep shaft as the flooding threat grew -- and other mines in the area closed.
"The disaster was caused by heavy rain, not problems within the mine, so it was decided that this was a natural disaster," Civil Affairs Minister Li Xueju (
"Sometimes the alert system may not be timely or accurate enough. They did not imagine the rain would be so heavy and they did not imagine that the river bank would leak," he said.
Riot police were stationed yesterday for a second day at the mine offices to silence angry relatives of the trapped miners.
Police tape was strung up 35m outside the company's gate. Behind the cordon about a dozen riot police sat with helmets and plastic shields.
About 20 mining company officials, employees and plainclothes security were also on hand.
An information officer for the Tai-an District, which includes Xintai City where the mine is located, said he did not know specifically why the riot police had been deployed.
"Some of the families might want to make trouble. This often happens when there is an accident. Look at Monday," said the official, Wang Dequan.
Tempers boiled over on Monday and several relatives of a missing miner smashed a reception window and display cases at a company office.
Mining company officials also visited families and told them to stay at home. Some families said they received 2,000 yuan (US$265) to keep quiet.
Li said the government does not normally pay compensation for people killed by natural disasters, but this accident was "different because it happened during production, so I believe the government and enterprise will give assistance to those injured and killed."
Many of the families have privately said they believe the miners are dead and want the government to ensure adequate compensation.
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