Rescuers pulled out two more bodies yesterday from the rubble of a collapsed coal mine in eastern India, taking the death toll to 10, police said, as many were still feared trapped.
A massive mound of earth caved in late Thursday at the Lalmatia open cast mine in Jharkhand state, burying at least 23 miners and dozens of vehicles as hundreds of workers battled overnight to rescue them.
“Up till now, 10 bodies have been recovered after two more were pulled out. Coal mine authorities believe that there may be two-three more dead bodies inside,” Jharkhand police spokesman, RK Mallick, said.
“The total dead should not be more than 13 or 14, as per assessment,” he added.
He added that it was difficult to know how many may be trapped, but said close to a dozen were still unaccounted for.
Some of the workers had escaped the disaster site following the collapse, Mallick said, with unconfirmed media reports putting the number trapped at 50.
Images showed the dead covered with white sheets on makeshift quilts as colleagues and locals looked on at the rescue efforts.
Police and emergency workers used sniffer dogs, earth movers and their bare hands to remove giant rocks and mangled, overturned trucks to locate the trapped workers under tons of earth.
Prime Minister Narendra Modi expressed his grief on Twitter, promising to help the state government in its rescue operations.
“Saddened by the loss of lives at a mine in Jharkhand. My prayers are with those trapped inside,” he said.
Federal disaster and rescue authorities have dispatched more than 200 rescue workers to the site.
The mine is operated by the government-owned Eastern Coalfields Ltd. Its top official, Niladri Roy, said that more than 820 feet of the mine collapsed as workers headed towards the exit around 7.30pm on Thursday.
There was no immediate explanation for the collapse, but the government has launched an investigation into the “unprecedented” incident.
In a separate incident on Thursday, four miners were injured at a government-run coal mine in Jharkhand’s Dhanbad district.
A mine official said the workers were hit after the roof of the Putki Balihari coal mine partially collapsed. Two of the workers were critically injured.
Jharkhand is one of the richest mineral zones in India, accounting for around 29% of the country’s coal deposits. However it is also one of India’s poorest areas and the epicentre of a Maoist insurgency.
India has maintained a relatively safe record in mining-related accidents compared to neighbouring China, which on average reports around 1,000 fatalities every year.
In 2015, India recorded 38 deaths across 570 mining sites.