A fire at a coal mine in northeast China has killed at least 24 workers, state media has reported.
The fire early on Wednesday at the mine in Liaoning province has left not less than 52 injured, Xinhua news agency said, quoting the state-owned Fuxin Coal Corporation.
There were no immediate details on the cause of the fire but mining accidents are common in China, the world’s largest consumer of coal.
Last year, China recorded 589 mining-related accidents, leaving 1,049 people dead or missing, according to the government. But both the number of accidents and fatalities were down more than 24 percent from 2012.
Authorities have sought to shut down small mines, a major source of accidents, in an effort to consolidate the industry.
In June, 22 people were killed in an accident at a coal mine in the southwest city of Chongqing. And 20 people died in April when a coal mine in southwest Yunnan province suddenly flooded, leaving miners trapped.
It has been almost a decade since one of China's worst mining disasters, when at least 214 miners died
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