Four miners have been rescued after 36 days trapped underground in a collapsed mine in China.
The gypsum mine in east China’s Shandong province collapsed on Christmas Day, killing one and leaving 17 missing. In the days that followed, rescuers detected four men 200 metres (660ft) below the surface.
The state broadcaster CCTV showed a miner being pulled out, surrounded by cheering rescuers in helmets and news crews. Medical staff rushed another miner along hospital corridors on a stretcher with his eyes covered.
Rescuers brought out the workers through two access tunnels they had drilled, and the first miner was pulled out in a capsule, the official Xinhua News Agency reported.
The collapse on 25 December was so violent it registered as a seismic event. Five days later, infrared cameras detected the four miners, weak with hunger, waving their hands. The miners told rescuers they were in underground passages that were intact, and rescuers began slowly drilling a route to save them. They sent food and clothes to the men through four small tunnels they drilled.
Eleven other people in the mine at the time of the collapse made it to safety or were rescued earlier.
Two days after the collapse, the owner of the mine, Ma Congbo, jumped into a well and drowned in an apparent suicide. Four officials in Pingyi county, where the mine is located, have been fired.
In 2010, 33 miners in Chile were rescued after being trapped for 69 days underground, including more than two weeks when no one knew whether they were alive.
China’s mines have long been the world’s deadliest, but safety improvements have reduced the death toll in recent years.
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