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Web users lament China's 'forest of steel' after lift death
by Staff Writers
Beijing (AFP) March 7, 2016


12 dead in Chinese coal mine accident: report
Beijing (AFP) March 7, 2016 - Twelve people were killed in a coal mine accident in China, state media reported Monday, the latest incident in the country's notoriously dangerous industry.

Coal gas flooded a colliery in Baishan, in the northeastern province of Jilin, killing the miners, the official Xinhua news service said. One was rescued and the cause of the accident on Sunday was being investigated.

Industrial safety standards are often flouted in China even though deadly incidents regularly make national news.

China is the world's largest coal producer and colliery accidents killed 931 people in 2014, according to official data.

The government says fatalities are declining, but some rights groups argue the actual figures are significantly higher due to under-reporting.

China's Internet users on Monday lamented the callousness of the country's teeming cities following the discovery of a woman's body a month after she was trapped in a malfunctioning lift.

The 43-year-old, reportedly suffering from mental illness but living alone, was stuck in the lift in the northern city of Xian in late January when maintenance workers shut off the power without properly checking if anyone was inside at the time, Chinese media said previously.

Her body was only found 30 days later as the crew left for the annual Lunar New Year holiday and did not return until March 1.

Chinese web users were shocked by the accident, deploring the indifference of relationships in modern society.

"I thought such things would only take place in the wild," one user posted on China's Twitter-like Weibo.

"But actually the crowded cities are nothing but just a forest of steel -- we are surrounded by so many people and have so many 'good friends' in (online) chat groups but there are few that really have anything to do with you."

Another user said she was haunted by fears of a solitary existence.

"I'm so afraid of becoming a woman so disliked, living alone and with no one showing any interest in me," she wrote.

Those responsible for the incident have been detained by police, reports said, without specifying whether they were the maintenance crew or others involved.

China is prone to accidents as regulations and standards are often flouted and enforcement is lax, sometimes due to corruption.

Last July a woman was killed after she plunged through flooring over an escalator in a Chinese department store.

Media on Monday blasted widespread negligence in China's lift maintenance industry and property management companies. A commentary carried by news portal jxnews.com.cn urged the government to strengthen supervision "to ensure such tragedies do not happen again".

It also criticised the victim's family for allegedly leaving her alone.

"The sick woman had no one to take care of her. It is impossible to understand why (her relatives) were so indifferent. How could such a mishap occur if she was looked after?" it asked.

wf/slb/sm

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