Coal Mine Collapse Kills 5 in Vietnam

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows a coffee plantation belonging to Doan Van Thang, a coffee farmer, in Pleiku, Gia Lai province, Vietnam, June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Minh Nguyen/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows a coffee plantation belonging to Doan Van Thang, a coffee farmer, in Pleiku, Gia Lai province, Vietnam, June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Minh Nguyen/File Photo
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Coal Mine Collapse Kills 5 in Vietnam

FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows a coffee plantation belonging to Doan Van Thang, a coffee farmer, in Pleiku, Gia Lai province, Vietnam, June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Minh Nguyen/File Photo
FILE PHOTO: A drone view shows a coffee plantation belonging to Doan Van Thang, a coffee farmer, in Pleiku, Gia Lai province, Vietnam, June 12, 2024. REUTERS/Minh Nguyen/File Photo

Five coal miners have been killed after a mine in northern Vietnam collapsed, local authorities said on Tuesday.
The accident happened on Monday at a coal mine in Quang Ninh province, the country's largest coal mining area, the provincial People's Committee said in a statement.
The victims, all males aged between 23 and 47, were employees of a unit of state-owned coal miner Vinacomin, state media reports said on Tuesday.

An investigation into the cause of the accident is underway, Reuters quoted the provincial committee as saying.
Coal mining accidents are not uncommon in Vietnam, which remains heavily reliant on the fossil fuel for power generation. Coal-fired power plants accounted for 60% of the country's electricity output in the first half of this year.
In April, four coal miners were killed and seven others were injured in coal mine gas explosion at a mine run by another unit of Vinacomin.



Flash Flooding Triggered by Heavy Monsoons in Northwest Pakistan Kills at Least 14 People 

Rescue workers clean the basement of a house damaged by flash flood waters in Darra Adamkhel, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, on July 30, 2024. (AFP)
Rescue workers clean the basement of a house damaged by flash flood waters in Darra Adamkhel, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, on July 30, 2024. (AFP)
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Flash Flooding Triggered by Heavy Monsoons in Northwest Pakistan Kills at Least 14 People 

Rescue workers clean the basement of a house damaged by flash flood waters in Darra Adamkhel, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, on July 30, 2024. (AFP)
Rescue workers clean the basement of a house damaged by flash flood waters in Darra Adamkhel, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province of Pakistan, on July 30, 2024. (AFP)

Heavy monsoons in northwest Pakistan triggered flash flooding, killing at least 14 people, 11 from the same family, officials said Tuesday.

The rains in Kohat, a district in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province, flooded the basement of a house where the family slept, Bilal Faizi, a spokesman for emergency services said, adding they retrieved the bodies of a man, three women, six children, and an 11-month-old baby girl.

He said three others died in the districts of Hangu and Bajur in the same province.

Pakistan has been hit by heavy rains since early July, killing more than 60 people and damaging over 250 homes, mostly in the eastern Punjab and southwestern Baluchistan province.

Authorities warned the rains are likely to cause flash flooding next week in various parts of the country.

Still, weather forecasters say the country will receive less rain as compared to 2022 when the climate-induced downpour swelled rivers and inundated at one point one-third of Pakistan , killing 1,739, displacing nearly 8 million, and causing $30 billion in damage in the cash-strapped country.

Every year, many cities in Pakistan struggle with the annual monsoon deluge, from July through September, drawing criticism for poor government planning. The South Asian country is among the most vulnerable to climate change.