Illegal Mine Collapses in China, Killing Five Just Days After Shanxi Disaster

BEIJING, May 31 (Reuters) – A ⁠mine ⁠shaft collapse during ⁠an illegal mining operation in China’s ​southwestern Yunnan province killed five people and ‌injured one, state media ‌reported, days after the country’s ⁠deadliest ⁠mining accident since 2009 left at least 82 dead.

The ​incident occurred around 4:30 a.m. on Sunday (2030 GMT on Saturday) in Yunnan’s Huize County, ​state news agency Xinhua reported, citing local ⁠authorities. The ⁠report did not ⁠specify ​what mineral was being mined.

There was only one ​survivor out of ⁠six people rescued from the site and sent to hospital, Xinhua said, and the person was in stable condition.

Authorities ⁠have launched an investigation into the cause of the ⁠incident, which follows the May 22 deadly gas explosion at a coal mine in the northern Shanxi province. Apart from the 82 people killed, two remain missing and 128 were injured.

Chinese authorities have vowed a thorough investigation ⁠into the Shanxi disaster, as preliminary findings uncovered unmarked tunnels, missing trackers and fake doors at the mining site.

(Reporting by ​Ethan Wang and Ryan Woo; ​Editing by Bernadette Baum)

Copyright 2026 Thomson Reuters.

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