Trapped miners in Anhui still alive: Rescuers   (Xinhua)  Updated: 2006-05-15 14:45  
Rescuers said Monday they saw hope for some miners to survive Saturday's iron 
mine collapse in Anqing, a city in East China's Anhui Province as they still 
heard human voices more than 50 hours after the tragedy. 
 Vague voices were heard from a platform some 130 meters underground, where 
eight miners, including a woman, have been trapped since Saturday morning. 
"We're certain there's someone alive," said a fireman in the rescue team who 
went 103 meters down the shaft Monday morning. 
 Waist-deep siltage at the bottom of the shaft kept the team from moving 
further, though rescuers have been cleaning siltage since Saturday night. 
 Sources with the emergency rescue headquarters said a scaffold has been set 
up in the shaft and medical workers are standing by to provide first-aid. 
 Following the collapse at the Dalongshan Iron Mine in Dalongshan Township at 
4:50 a.m. Saturday, rocks, dust and water capped the ventilation hole and the 
exit, making it impossible for the miners to escape. 
 A geological team is drilling a new ventilation hole through which rescuers 
will provide the miners with water. 
 It is still unknown how many miners are alive. 
 The Dalongshan Iron Mine was founded in 1992 as a township-run company but 
was privatized in 1999. It employs 15 people and produces 15,000 tons of iron 
ore a year. 
 In the wake of the tragedy, the city government of Anqing ordered all local 
mines to halt production for a safety overhaul. Enditem
 
   
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