2021 Hpakant jade mine disaster

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25°36′N 96°18′E / 25.6°N 96.3°E / 25.6; 96.3

Date22 December 2021 (2021-12-22)
Time04:00 MST
Deaths3–20
2021 Hpakant jade mine disaster
Hpakant jade mine is located in Myanmar
Hpakant jade mine
Hpakant jade mine
Hpakant jade mine (Myanmar)
Date22 December 2021 (2021-12-22)
Time04:00 MST
LocationHpakant, Kachin State, Myanmar
Deaths3–20
Non-fatal injuries25
Missing70–100

On December 22, 2021, a landslide at a jade mine in the Hpakant township in Kachin State, Myanmar, killed at least three people, and left between 70 and 100 missing.[1]

Workers at a jade mine in Kachin in 2018

Myanmar supplies 90% of all jade on the planet,[2] in a trade worth US$790 million according to Myanmar's official statistics,[3] though independent estimates put it at US$30–31 billion worth per year.[4][5] According to Global Witness, the industry was worth $US 31 billion.[6][7][8] While Reuters, al Jazeera and Deutsche Welle do not say any number nor year.[3][9][10] The industry is known for frequent accidents at its mining sites. Hpakant is home to the largest jade mine in the world.[4]

Dozens of miners have been killed in recent years as a result of smaller accidents, with "jade pickers" who scavenge tailings from larger operators being at greater risk.[9] These freelance miners live at the base of huge mounds of rubble that has been excavated by heavy machinery.[11] The pickers are usually migrants from other regions of Myanmar and are unregistered, which makes identification of the missing people difficult.[11] Hundreds of miners scavenge through tailings dumped by trucks at the site. The tailings are piled high forming steep and high slopes, in a moonscape of no vegetation, which is likely to collapse.[4]

In 2015, a landslide killed at least 116 people in the mine.[6] After the incident and the formation of Htin Kyaw's Cabinet, led by Htin Kyaw and Aung San Suu Kyi in 2016, the cabinet promised to reform the jade industry and reduce the accidents. Activists claim, however, that little has been done in practice since the Cabinet took power that same year.[9] In 2019, fifty workers were buried in a mine collapse, resulting in the deaths of four miners and two rescue workers.[6] According to the BBC at least 100 people died in that year.[4]

In 2020, at least 175 people were killed in another landslide in the same mine. The 2020 disaster was the worst mining-related event in the country. The landslide was triggered by mining waste collapsing into the lake. More recently, a week before the 2021 landslide, another accident at a jade mine in the same area left ten miners missing.

Jade mining in Myanmar is prohibited till March 2022, but these imposed laws are broken by locals who are struggling amidst low employment and poverty. In 2018, the nation passed a new law to reform the corrupted industry.[12] However, the coup d'état in February 2021 prevented any proper execution of the law.[13]

Landslide

The landslide occurred at just before daybreak at 04:00 local time on Wednesday 22 December 2021.[14] It was located at an open mine near the village of Thayar Gone.[15] The likely cause of the landslide was an overflow of mining waste dumped by trucks into the open-pit mine.[16] Locals said that water had seeped into the soil along the slopes of the mine, causing it to destabilize and collapse.[17] The landslide was an estimated 100 feet high by 150 feet wide and collapsed into a lake at the bottom of the mine. It triggered waves that swept away miners. The landslide also took down with it small shops on the waste mount.[18]

Casualties

Aftermath

References

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