Nine coal miners die in gas explosion in Colombia

Nine coal miners die in gas explosion in Colombia

Vanessa BuschschlüterLatin America online editor

Luis ACOSTA / AFP via Getty Images The relative of a miner caught in the explosion at the mine in Sutatausa gestures as he speaks to the media. His face is stained with coal dust. He is wearing a black baseball cap with a white cockerel embroidered on top and a red coat. Luis ACOSTA / AFP via Getty Images

Relatives of the victims rushed to the mine in Sutatausa to try and help with the rescue efforts

Nine people have died in an explosion at a coal mine in Colombia in the latest fatal accident to hit the country's mining sector.

Emergency workers said they had rescued six miners from the shafts in Sutatausa, north of the capital, Bogotá.

Colombia's national mining agency said a build-up of gases was thought to have caused the explosion at 16:00 (21:00 GMT) on Monday.

It also published a list of recommendations it said it had made to the mine's operators after an inspection less than a month ago, in which it had warned of a "potentially dangerous gas build-up". Many mines in Colombia are operated informally and without proper safety standards.

The captain of the regional fire department, Álvaro Farfán, said emergency workers were still working to retrieve the miners' bodies.

Those who survived are being treated in hospital.

Mining accidents are common in Colombia.

One of the deadliest recent incidents also unfolded in Sutatausa in 2023, when 21 people died in a blast which tore through the tunnels of a complex of coal mines in the area.

That explosion was caused by a build-up of methane gas, investigators said at the time.

Sutatausa has been a coal-mining centre for decades with many of its residents working in the industry.

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