Quang Ninh was last week hit by the heaviest rain
recorded in 40 years, with up to 800 millimetres (31 inches) in some areas,
causing flooding, landslides and toxic sludge spills from coal mines.
Seventeen people have been killed, including two
families in Mong Duong district who were caught in a toxic mudslide on July
26 which buried the entire community in up to two metres of sludge from a
nearby mine.
"In one second, mud and rock smashed into my house.
We were lucky to escape with our daughter," To Thi Huyen, 37, a primary
school teacher, recalled.
"We have nothing now, as the house and all our
assets are in the mud. We don't know what happens next," Huyen told AFP.
Huyen and some 200 other affected people are living in
an emergency shelter set up by local authorities in the area.
People collecting coal from a
flooded river next to the Mong Duong coal mine on August 1, 2015 following
heavy rains in the northern coastal
Pham Ngoc Lu, a local official in Mong Duong, said they
were doing their best to help the affected communities.
"We're providing food and other necessities,"
he said.
The torrential rain has caused sludge from the mines to
spill onto local communities, creating what activists call immediate and
ongoing health and environmental hazards.
"We are deeply concerned by the pace of this
unfolding disaster and its sheer scale," said Robert Kennedy, president
of Waterkeeper Alliance, an NGO that campaigns for clean drinking water.
At the Mong Duong coal mine, production has been
suspended since the rains hit last week. The mine was affected by mudslides,
but was not the source of the deluge that hit the nearby community -- which
came from another coal mine.
Bulldozers and trucks are working through the night to
clear the mud at the mine itself, said company official Tran Quang Canh.
"We're trying to save the mine and recover our
production to keep our more than 4,000 labourers employed," Canh said.
Canh said it would take at least 10 days for part of the
mine to be brought back into operation, and a further three months to get the
mine back to normal production.
The shutdowns at the coal mines in Quang Ninh have
prompted state monopoly Electricity of Vietnam to urge the public to save
power.
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Chủ Nhật, 2 tháng 8, 2015
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