The State Administration of Coal Mine Safety announced
yesterday that the bodies of the last two missing miners from the
explosion in Xinjiang
Uygur Autonomous Region have been found, bringing the total
death toll to 83.
The region's deadliest colliery accident took place at Shenlong
Coal Mine in Fukang County at 2:30 AM on Monday when 87 people were
working underground, according to administration director Zhao
Tiechui.
On Tuesday, the State Administration of Work Safety (SAWS)
attributed the tragedy to overproduction, lax work safety license
checks and poor management.
A SAWS research team, whose work was appraised in Beijing
yesterday, said workplace deaths and injuries can be expected to
continue to rise in the years leading to 2020 as industrialization
accelerates.
"International experience and lessons from developed countries
have already proved that in this phase of industrialization, it is
easy to see occurrences of death and injury in the workplace," said
SAWS Vice-Minister Wang Xianzheng.
According to a China Daily report today, the research
found that when a country's per capita GDP is between US$1,000 and
US$3,000, the rise in work-related deaths and injuries is difficult
to curb, though it did not specify why.
A group of 14 researchers made their findings after three years
of research into work safety records of countries including the US
and Japan, said Huang Shengchu, president of the China Coal
Information Institute, who headed the team.
"We are in such a phase of industrialization and should be
highly cautious," said Huang, as Chinese per capita GDP reached
US$1,000 in 2003 and is projected to rise to US$3,000 in 2020.
Huang's team was not optimistic about the chances of
significantly reducing work-related deaths in this period, but
added that they should greatly decrease once the country is more
industrialized.
The researchers identified the years around 2010 as a
particularly "sensitive time" likely to see the sharpest rise in
workplace accidents.
"It doesn't mean that we have no ways to counter such a horrible
trend," said Huang, "Restructuring the economy would decrease the
number of deaths and injuries."
Currently, sectors such as mining, manufacturing and
construction contribute the lion's share to China's economy, and
deaths and injuries are prone to occur if insufficient labor
protection measures are taken.
(China Daily, Xinhua News Agency July 14, 2005)
|