The Philippine Star

90 dead in Myanmar landslide

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KACHIN (AFP) — At least 90 people have died in a huge landslide in a remote jade mining area of northern Myanmar, officials said yesterday, as search teams continued to find bodies in one of the deadliest disasters to strike the country’s shadowy jade industry.

” We found 79 dead bodies on Nov. 21 ( and) 11 today so the total is 90,” said Nilar Myint, an official from the local administra­tive authoritie­s in Hpakant, northern Kachin state, adding that the rescue operation was ongoing.

Rescuers were thought to still be battling to dig through the mountains of loose rubble at the site yesterday, in the latest deadly accident to affect Myanmar’s secretive multi-billion dollar jade industry in war-torn Kachin.

Those killed were thought to have been scavenging through a mountain of waste rubble dumped by mechanical diggers used by the mining firms in the area to extract Myanmar’s most valuable precious stone.

Landslides are a common hazard in the area as people living off the industry’s waste pick their way across perilous mounds, driven by the hope that they might find a chunk of jade worth thousands of dollars.

Scores have been killed this year alone as local people say the mining firms, many of which are linked to the country’s juntaera military elite, scale up their operations in Kachin.

Myanmar is the source of virtually all of the world’s finest jadeite, an almost translucen­t green stone that is prized above almost all other materials in neighbouri­ng China.

In an October report, advocacy group Global Witness estimated that the value of jade produced in 2014 alone was $31 billion, the equivalent of nearly half the country’s GDP.

But that figure is around 10 times the official $3.4 billion sales of the precious stone last year, in an industry that has long been shrouded in secrecy with much of the best jade thought to be smuggled directly to China.

Local people in Hpakant complain of a litany of abuses associated with the mining industry, including the frequency of accidents and land confiscati­ons.

The area has been turned into a moonscape of environmen­tal destructio­n as huge diggers gouge the Earth looking for jade.

Itinerant miners are drawn from all parts of Myanmar by the promise of riches and become easy prey for drug addiction in Hpakant, where heroin and methamphet­amine are cheaply available on the streets.

 ?? REUTERS ?? People look at the bodies of miners who were killed by a landslide in Myanmar Saturday.
REUTERS People look at the bodies of miners who were killed by a landslide in Myanmar Saturday.

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