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Myanmar mine landslide: Death toll crosses 160, more still missing

International Desk
03 Jul 2020 13:03:22 | Update: 03 Jul 2020 18:07:42
Myanmar mine landslide: Death toll crosses 160, more still missing
Rescue workers carrying the body of a victim after a landslide at a jade mining site in Myanmar.

The death toll from a devastating jade mine landslide in northern Myanmar's Kachin State reached 162 with more people still feared trapped under the mud and rubble, officials said.

Myanmar Fire Department said, so far 162 bodies had been recovered as of 7:15 pm Thursday local time and another 54 people have been taken to hospital. Local lawmaker Khin Maung Myint warned that the death toll is expected to rise further, but heavy rain had forced rescue efforts to be called off.

"The jade miners were smothered by a wave of mud, which hit after heavy rainfall," the country's fire service said in the Facebook post.

The United Nations in Myanmar issued a statement saying it was "deeply saddened by the terrible loss of life due to a massive landslide at a mining site in Hpakant Township in Kachin State on the morning of 2nd of June 2020."

It commended the "courageous efforts by the men and women involved in the difficult rescue and recovery efforts," extended its sincere condolences to the families of the victims and wished the injured a speedy recovery.

Myanmar's military chief also sent a message of condolence following the incident.

Landslides and other fatal accidents are common in Myanmar's gemstone mines. Located in thick, remote jungles, many of the country's jade mines are unregulated. People working as jade pickers often labour in perilous conditions, scrambling up and down the steep hills of rubble and loose shale.

Last year, more than 50 workers were buried in a mudslide buried at a jade mine in Hpakant after a lake collapsed. In 2015, at least 113 people were killed in when a hill of tailings from a jade mine, also in Hpakant, collapsed onto the huts of sleeping workers.

A shadowy industry
Myanmar produces about 70% of the world's jade and Hpakant is home to the world's largest jade mine.

Jade is believed to be one of Myanmar's most profitable exports and worth billions of dollars, fueled in large part by demand in neighbouring China.

Global Witness, a nonprofit dedicated to investigating corruption and environmental abuse, estimated the jade industry was worth about $31 billion in 2014, nearly half of the country's official GDP that year.

Exact numbers are unknown as the industry is highly unregulated, but the Natural Resource Governance Institute, an advocacy group, ranked Myanmar's gemstone sector one of the most opaque in the world.

Prostitution and drug addiction are rife among the mining communities. Kachin State has been battling a major heroin epidemic, with many young people using the drug.

The US State Department alleged in a 2018 report that the gem mining industry in Kachin State employs forced labourers.

(Source: CNN)

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