NEWS

Blast kills 18 in separatists’ plagued area

2 were rescue people

Lack of proper safety standards and the use of prohibited explosives at work led to the deaths of 18 people.

Pakistani authorities said Saturday they have now retrieved 18 bodies after a blast tore through a coal mine in southwest Pakistan earlier this week, including two rescuers who entered after the explosion.

The mine caved in after workers used dynamite during an excavation in Sinjidi, some 45 kilometers (28 miles) east of Quetta, the capital of oil and gas-rich Balochistan province.

death at coal mine

Rescue teams had pulled nine workers alive from different tunnels while eight had been found dead at the depth of 800 feet(240 meters).

“We later found bodies of another eight miners, who were buried at the depth of 4,000 feet(1,219 meters), provincial chief mines inspector Muhammad Iftikhar told the media.

bodies being brought out

He said two of the five volunteers who entered the mine to rescue trapped workers despite warnings by authorities also lost their lives.

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“We pulled out all the five volunteers who were badly affected by poisonous gases in the mine. Two of them died on their way to hospital while three others are currently hospitalized in Quetta,” Iftikhar said.

onlookers watch on

A senior local government official in Quetta also confirmed the new toll of 18.

While the use of dynamite in the mines is officially prohibited, miners often use the explosive to quickly excavate coal.

In a similar incident, at least 43 miners were killed in Sorange district of Balochistan in 2011.

Coal mines in the impoverished province are notorious for poor safety standards.

Rich in mineral wealth, Balochistan is plagued by Islamist and separatist insurgencies who have long complained locals do not benefit enough from the region’s natural resources.

Hundreds of people have died in the violence since 2004.

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