3 dead, 11 trapped in Mexico coal mine blast
3 dead, 11 trapped in Mexico coal mine blast
The announcement of the three deaths came just after Mexico said it was calling in mine rescue experts from Chile.

San Juan de Sabinas: A gas explosion in a coal mine in northern Mexico on Tuesday killed three miners, injured one and left 11 others trapped deep underground. Officials said chances were slim that anyone could have survived the massive blast.

Dozens of weeping relatives of the miners gathered outside the small, recently opened mine in San Juan de Sabinas, Coahuila state, about 85 miles (135 kilometers) southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas.

President Felipe Calderon called on Mexicans "to pray that they are still alive."

But Labor Secretary Javier Lozano said mine employees had found the bodies of three miners at the front of the blast area, and given the size of the explosion and its force, "the outlook is very bad."

"The truth is that it does not allow us to hold out much hope," said Lozano, noting the blast was so strong it wounded a 15-year-old boy who had been working on a conveyor belt outside the mine pit separating coal from tailings.

The boy was taken to a hospital in serious condition, said Jesus Espinoza, a spokesman for mining company BIMSA. Federal prosecutors later said both the boy's arms had been amputated and that he remained in serious condition.

Lozano said the boy's employment at the mine was an apparent violation of labor laws.

The announcement of the three deaths came just after Mexico said it was calling in mine rescue experts from Chile to help in the effort.

The 14 miners had gone down the 197-feet (60-meter) deep shaft when the explosion happened early Tuesday.

A cry went up from the roughly 80 relatives and friends of the miners outside the pit when a truck from the local morgue arrived. "No, Lord, I don't want this to happen," said one woman.

The mine had opened just over a month ago, and employed about 25 miners.

The national mine workers' union said in a statement that the mine's work force was not unionized, and it criticized what it called "the totally unsafe conditions in which coal mines in Mexico, and especially in this region known as the coal belt, operate."

Officials said they were investigating who was actually operating the mine, because there was conflicting registry data.

And the federal Attorney General's Office said it had opened an investigation in to the blast, which it said was caused by a gas buildup.

A similar blast caused by methane gas killed 65 miners in February 2006 at the Pasta de Conchos coal mine in San Juan de Sabinas, near where Tuesday's explosion occurred.

Rescuers eventually recovered the bodies of two miners from the 2006 blast but tons of wood, rock and metal, as well as toxic gas, prevented the recovery of the others.

On Tuesday, a group of relatives of miners killed in the 2006 explosion issued a press statement calling on the government to outlaw the kind of more dangerous, small-scale, vertical-shaft coal mines that dot the region. Coahuila Gov. Jorge Torres Lopez promised the small mines would be subject to review and inspection.

Still smarting from criticism about the government's failings in mine safety, and their inability to recover the bodies from the 2006 blast, federal officials promised aid to the trapped miners' families and all necessary assistance in the rescue effort.

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