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Illegal mine collapses in China’s Yunnan, killing five just days after deadly Shanxi blast
Rescuers work at the site following a gas explosion at Liushenyu coal mine in Qinyuan county, Shanxi province May 23, 2026. A mine shaft collapse during an ‌illegal mining operation in China’s south-western Yunnan province killed five people and injured one, ‌state media reported, days after the mine collapse in Shanxi. — cnsphoto/Reuters pic

BEIJING, May 31 — A mine shaft collapse during an ‌illegal mining operation in China’s south-western Yunnan province killed five people and injured one, ‌state media reported, days after the country’s deadliest mining accident since 2009 left at least 82 dead.

The incident occurred around 4.30am today (2030 GMT yesterday/4.30am Malaysian time today) in Yunnan’s Huize County, state news agency Xinhua reported, citing local authorities. The report did not ‌specify what mineral was being mined.

There was ⁠only one survivor ⁠out of six ⁠people rescued from the site ⁠and ⁠sent to hospital, Xinhua said, and the person was in stable condition.

Authorities ⁠have launched an investigation into the cause of the incident, which follows the May 22 deadly gas explosion at a coal mine in the ⁠northern Shanxi province. Apart from the 82 people killed, two remain missing and ⁠128 were injured.

Chinese authorities have vowed a ⁠thorough ⁠investigation into the Shanxi disaster, as preliminary findings uncovered unmarked tunnels, missing trackers and ‌fake doors at the mining site. — Reuters

 

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