The death toll from a coal mine explosion in southwestern China has risen to 17.
The official Xinhua News Agency says 28 miners were in the shaft when the blast occurred Tuesday in Guizhou province. Eleven were rescued and being treated in a hospital.
Initial reports said 13 miners had died, but three rescued workers later died in a hospital and another body was recovered from the shafts Wednesday morning, bringing the toll to 17.
Xinhua did not give a cause for the blast.
China’s coal mines are the most dangerous in the world, although the industry’s safety record has improved in recent years as smaller, illegal mines have been closed. Annual fatalities are now about one-third of the high of nearly 7,000 in 2002.
Was this article valuable?
Here are more articles you may enjoy.
Tesla Drivers Are Buying Escape Tools and Cars to Avoid Getting Trapped Inside
Zillow Deleting Climate Risk Scores Reveals Limits of Flood, Fire Data
Jump Trading Faces $4 Billion Terraform Administrator Suit
LA Fires Push Insurers’ 2025 Disaster Losses to $107 Billion