Owners of Chinese mine where 82 died in blast accused of ‘serious violations’ of the law
The owners of a Chinese coal mine where at least 82 people died in a blast have been accused of "serious violations of the law" by the local government. Chen Xiangyang, deputy party secretary of Changzhi in Shanxi province, announced that all four mines operated by the Shanxi Tongzhou Group were immediately ordered to suspend operations.

Briefing Summary
AI-generatedThe owners of a Chinese coal mine where at least 82 people died in a blast have been accused of "serious violations of the law" by the local government. Chen Xiangyang, deputy party secretary of Changzhi in Shanxi province, announced that all four mines operated by the Shanxi Tongzhou Group were immediately ordered to suspend operations. This preliminary assessment indicates serious legal violations by the coal mine enterprise involved. Search and rescue operations for missing personnel continued through the night. The specific cause of the accident is still under further investigation.
Article analysis
Model · rule-basedKey claims
4 extractedThe government will spare no effort or cost to search for and rescue the missing personnel.
The specific cause of the accident is under further investigation.
All four mines operated by the Shanxi Tongzhou Group were immediately ordered to suspend operations.
Owners of a Chinese coal mine where at least 82 people died have been accused of "serious violations of the law".