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Six students die in China mine accident

According to a filing made on Thursday by the Shanghai Stock Exchange, six university students drowned while visiting a copper-molybdenum mine owned by Zhongjin Gold Corp. in northern China.

After protective grates collapsed, students from Northeastern University of Shenyang fell in a flotation chamber - mining equipment that uses liquid to extract copper from crushed ore.

According to Zhongjin Gold's filing, which is a subsidiary owned by the state-owned China National Gold Group Co., an injured teacher also suffered injuries in the accident.

The company reported that it had activated a plan of emergency and notified the local authorities about the incident.

In a second filing to the stock exchange later on Thursday, Zhongjin Gold said that the operator of the mine had halted the production.

Zhongjin Gold shares closed Thursday down 4.4%.

According to Henan Radio and Television's social media page, a teacher at Northeastern University said that such field trips have been organized for years and this incident was unplanned.

The teacher claimed that the university sent staff on the scene to deal with the incident. Reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing and rewriting by Raju Gopalakrishnan, Joe Bavier

(source: Reuters)