Bangkok Post

More bodies found at mine

Workers had no time to flee the Myanmar mine collapse that killed at least 166, writes Saw Nang

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HPAKANT: Rescuers yesterday pulled several more bodies from a landslide which killed over 160 jade miners in northern Myanmar, many of them migrant workers seeking their fortune in treacherou­s open-cast mines near the China border.

The disaster — the worst in memory to strike Myanmar’s notoriousl­y dangerous jade mines — occurred on Thursday when a hillside collapsed in heavy monsoon rains.

A deluge of mud smothered workers scouring the land for the precious stone — a moment of horror captured on camera phone footage.

The area is close to the Chinese border in Kachin state, where billions of dollars of jade is believed to be scoured each year from bare hillsides.

“The search and rescue missions continued today and we now have 166 bodies,” the Myanmar Fire Services Department said in a Facebook post, raising the overnight toll by four.

With barely enough time to yell “run,” hundreds of jade miners had only moments to escape their killer: a giant wave of mud and water, more than 7 metres high, propelled out of a giant pit mine swollen with rainwater.

Weeks of heavy rains, carried by the seasonal monsoon, had filled the Wai Khar jade mine in northern Myanmar and turned it into a lake. Towering over the pit was a 305m hillside topped with a mound of mining waste, its foundation­s weakening with every drop of rain.

Just after sunrise on Thursday the earth began to shift and a wall of mud cascaded down the mound’s steep slope, slamming into the flooded mine and sending a huge wave of water along its walls as rushing green water swept from one end of the lake to the other.

“When the open-pit mine collapsed, the workers didn’t have time to run away,” said Tin Soe, the region’s representa­tive in parliament. “The height of the wave was about 7 metres, and it drowned many people. It was like a tsunami.”

Hundreds of miners who were digging for jade illegally near the water’s edge were quickly overwhelme­d by the muddy green wave. Some managed to run to higher ground. But many were not so lucky.

By yesterday evening, officials said 166 bodies had been recovered, and officials expected the death toll to surpass 200. Officials said there was little left for rescuers to do but retrieve bodies that floated to the surface.

The disaster occurred after a heavy rainstorm in Hpakant township in Kachin state, where miners labour in notoriousl­y hazardous conditions to produce jade worth billions of dollars.

The government ordered the mines in the region to close from July 1 to Sept 30 because of the risk of landslides during the heavy rains of the monsoon season, officials said.

But at the Wai Khar mine, hundreds of illegal workers came in to take the place of the regular miners despite the risk, Tin Soe said.

“The government ordered them to stop because it is dangerous to work here in the rainy season,” he said by phone from the scene of the disaster. “But after the mining companies stopped, an illegal ethnic armed group took money from the illegal miners and gave them permission to work here.”

Kachin is Myanmar’s northernmo­st state and borders China and India. Rich in natural resources, Kachin has been racked by fighting between the military and ethnic rebels, but the lucrative jade mining area has largely remained under government control. Despite attempts to regulate the industry, much of the mining there is done illegally by wildcat miners.

Much of the wealth generated by the jade industry is controlled by Myanmar’s military, which has long ruled the country and retains vast authority under the constituti­on it drafted.

But the main rebel group in the region, the Kachin Independen­t Army, also finances its operations from the jade trade. It took over the mine when the consortium of five companies that operate it closed for the season on Tuesday.

Tin Soe said that about 100,000 miners work in the region and that it is impossible to stop them despite the risks.

“If people continue working, there will surely be more landslides and death,” he said. “But there is no rule of law in this area. That’s why it’s difficult to control.”

Mine collapses occur frequently in the jade mining region of Kachin state. More than 50 people died in a similar landslide last year, and dozens were swept away the year before. At least 120 were buried in 2015 after the collapse of a mound of mining waste known as tailings.

Kyaw Min, administra­tor for the Wai Khar district, said continuing rainfall was hampering the search-and-rescue effort.

“We can’t go deeper to rescue, so we have to pick up the floating dead bodies,” he said. “It’s also difficult to send the patients to hospital because the roads are so muddy.”

 ?? AFP ?? Rescuers recover bodies near the landslide area of the jade mining site in Hpakant in Kachin state on Thursday.
AFP Rescuers recover bodies near the landslide area of the jade mining site in Hpakant in Kachin state on Thursday.

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