
A devastating gas explosion at the Liushenyu Coal Mine in northern China has left at least 90 people dead, exposing the lethal consequences of systemic safety failures within the Chinese mining industry. The blast, which occurred Friday evening, trapped 247 workers on duty at the Tongzhou Group-operated facility.
Survivors described a scene of chaos, with miners collapsing from toxic fumes as they attempted to flee. While the exact cause remains under investigation, state media confirmed that carbon monoxide levels in the mine had exceeded safety limits.
The tragedy was entirely predictable: the Liushenyu mine was officially designated a 'severe safety hazard' by the Chinese National Mine Safety Administration in 2024, and the operating company had already been hit with two administrative penalties for safety violations in 2025.
Despite the regime's claims of tightening standards, this disaster serves as a grim reminder of the human cost of China's massive coal reliance.
As rescue teams continue to operate at the site, Chinese authorities have detained mine officials, though the long-standing neglect of basic safety protocols suggests that accountability is coming far too late for the victims.
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