Former Shanxi Coal Worker Says Mine Blast Exposed Hidden Work Areas, Weak Oversight

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A former coal-industry worker in China’s northern Shanxi Province said the false maps and hidden work areas exposed after the Liushenyu coal mine explosion reflect a broader operating culture in which mines manage inspections, regulators rely on paperwork, and penalties fail to stop dangerous production.Ding Haifeng, who previously worked for a company under a coal-mining group in Xiangyuan County, Changzhi city, told the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times on May 26 that the use of two sets of drawings and two monitoring systems was tied to both company profit motives and weak supervision.“Companies study how to deal with the authorities and maximize profits,” Ding said.He said fully following safety requirements over the long term would raise costs, while some grassroots inspections rely on records, forms, and ledgers provided by the company rather than direct underground verification. Ding said that kind of inspection culture allows concealed production to continue for long periods.The May 22 gas explosion at the Liushenyu coal mine in Qinyuan County killed 82 people, left two missing, and sent 128 people to the hospital, according to a brief county announcement on May 23. There has been no official update since then. The county’s website then reposted a Shanxi Daily article on May 25 highlighting “well-organized” rescue work and emergency response, without any update on victims.Because the Chinese Communist Party tightly censors information and has a record of underreporting number of victims in disasters and public health incidents, the actual number of people affected might be higher. The Epoch Times is unable to independently verify the official figures.Hidden Work AreasThe Epoch Times earlier reported that later accounts described false maps, hidden work areas, missing worker-tracking cards, subcontracted labor, and earlier penalties at Liushenyu.Ding said those problems fit what he had seen in China’s coal industry. He said companies can maintain one set of records for inspections while using another set to guide actual production underground. Workers may be sent into areas or conditions that are not reflected in the materials shown to regulators, he said.Liu Qiang, a miner with more than 30 years of mine-safety inspection experience who had worked as a gas inspector at Liushenyu’s No. 3 mine around 2012, said hidden mining areas had existed at the mine for years. He told state media China National Radio (CNR) on May 26 that during his time there, one of every three tunneling faces could hide what miners called a “dark side,” or a hidden work area. To make those areas disappear from official oversight, he said, the mine had a full set of evasion methods; not issuing positioning cards to miners was only one of them.Tracking Cards and Missing WorkersThe tracking-card failure has become one of the clearest examples of how the mine’s safety system broke down.When the blast occurred, 247 people were actually underground, while the mine’s entry board initially showed 124, according to county officials. Later checks found that 144 workers carried underground positioning cards and 103 did not.Ding said inspections that rely on paperwork rather than direct underground checks can miss exactly that kind of problem. If regulators do not independently verify how many workers are underground and where they are working, he said, the company’s own records can shape what officials see.Penalties Too Small to DeterDing said penalties often fail to deter illegal production because the fines are too small compared with the money a mine can make by continuing output.Liushenyu had received six administrative penalties since 2017, totaling 515,800 yuan (about $76,000), with five of those penalties occurring in the past five years, the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times reported, citing data from Chinese business data platform Tianyancha.Specifically, the mine was fined 20,000 yuan (about $3,000) in December 2025 over problems involving an emergency-stop protection line on a passenger device and broken roof support measures. It was fined 30,000 yuan (about $4,400) in July 2025 after some workers entered the mine without reflective-marked work clothes.Ding said a fine of several tens of thousands of yuan would not necessarily match even a day of production profits. Small penalties, he said, become part of the cost of doing business when they are not paired with real enforcement, shutdowns, or individual accountability.Questions Beyond One MineDing said the problems exposed at Liushenyu should not be viewed as isolated to one operator. He described hidden maps, concealed work areas, and inspection evasion as part of a wider environment shaped by production pressure, weak supervision, and low violation costs.A man identified only as Zeng, who had lived and worked in Shanxi for years, told the Chinese edition of The Epoch Times that public attention and anger initially focused on Tongzhou Group, the company that operates the Liushenyu coal mine, but later shifted to regulatory failure.He said the public and media were asking why fines were too small to deter violations, why a mine listed as a serious-disaster mine could still maintain safety-standard credentials, and why stationed safety supervisors did not serve as an effective final line of defense.Xia Song and Yi Ru contributed to this report.

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