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China investigates the mining disaster that claimed 82 lives.

State media reported on Tuesday that the initial investigation into the China's deadliest mining disaster in 15 years revealed unmarked tunnels, fake doors, and missing trackers. The government has vowed to leave no stone untouched.

A gas explosion at the Liushenyu Mine in the coal-rich Province of Shanxi, in northern China, killed at least 82 people late Friday night. State media reported that two people were still missing and 128 others hospitalized.

This is the worst mining accident to occur in China since 2009. A gas explosion in the Xinxing Mine, in Heilongjiang Province, killed 108 workers.

The cause of the fatal incident is still under investigation. However, the official Xinhua News Agency on Tuesday stated that hidden mining tunnels, false?drawings, and outsourced, unregistered, and unregistered miners who were not provided with life-saving location tracking devices, contributed to the incident.

'YIN-YANG DRAWINGS'

Xinhua reported that the mine controlled by 'Shanxi Tongzhou Coal Coking Group' maintained two different sets of plans and surveillance system. The mine, controlled by?Shanxi Tongzhou Coal Coking Group, maintained two separate sets of plans and surveillance systems.

According to the state media, officials of the company were detained.

The coal mined from the unregulated and hidden tunnels was not included in official production figures.

Two sets of plans are colloquially known as "yin-yang" drawings: one is kept 'in the light for the inspectors to examine and the other in the darkness.

The national mine safety authority has stated that despite crackdowns in China, similar profit-driven practices continue to be commonplace in coal mines.

Xinhua reported that the Liushenyu Mine "used wire mesh, woven plastic sacks, and mortar to create fake doors which looked like the rock walls of the mine tunnel."

The workers would close the fake doors and smear the coal ash on them to blend in with the rest.

ALARMS FOR MISSING TRACKERS

In order to evade detection, the mine operator hired subcontracted labour to work in the concealed tunnels without providing them with required identification-location trackers or logging them in ?the official entry record.

If the trackers had been used, authorities could have monitored where the miner was underground.

According to CCTV footage shown Monday, only 124 people were underground when the blast happened on Friday. The mine was actually staffed by 247 people, which means that 123 of them were not tracked in the tunnels.

State media reported that the?lack' of accurate maps, and information on miners' locations has seriously hampered rescue efforts.

In a separate report, Tuesday, state radio broadcaster said that the Liushenyu Mine - classified by authorities as a high-gas mine with an elevated blast risk -- also avoided installing gas monitoring?equipment in order to evade their supervision.

Before Friday's tragedy, authorities were aware of the issues. The mine operator in 2025 was fined by regulators after they discovered hidden working faces. However, this penalty did not serve as a deterrent and the company continued to produce illegally.

After the incident, some mines in China halted production or reduced it to allow for safety inspections.

(source: Reuters)