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Officials say that around 30 people were killed in an incident at a copper mine in Congo.

The artisanal mining agency of the Congo said that around 30 people died at a semi industrial copper mine in the southeast after a collapsed bridge.

A spokesperson for the agency said that 49 people died and 20 were in critical condition after the incident on Saturday, at the Kalando mine site in Lualaba Province.

In Congo, artisanal mining supports between 1.5 and 2 million people directly.

According to SAEMAPE, the Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining Support and Guidance Service of Congo, the collapse was caused by "panic, which was reportedly triggered" by gunfire by military personnel guarding site.

SAEMAPE said in a Sunday statement that the miners "piled up on each other, causing injury and death".

The Initiative for the Protection of Human Rights demanded an independent investigation of the military's involvement in the deaths citing reports of clashes involving miners and soldiers.

A military spokesperson didn't immediately respond to an inquiry for comment.

Roy Kaumba said that in a television statement, 32 deaths had been confirmed.

Unregulated artisanal mining is a common cause of accidents, and dozens die every year in sites where diggers often dig deep underground with inadequate equipment. Reporting by Ange A. Kasongo, Congo Newsroom; Writing and editing by Robbie Corey Boulet

(source: Reuters)