Gas explosion traps 12 workers after coal mine collapses in southwest Pakistan

This is a locator map for Pakistan with its capital, Islamabad, and the Kashmir region. (AP Photo)

QUETTA, Pakistan (AP) — At least 12 miners remain trapped after a methane gas explosion caused a mine to collapse in a remote area of southwest Pakistan, officials said Friday as authorities launched an operation to rescue the miners.

Abdul Ghani, a mines inspector, said the blast happened on Thursday night in Singidi, a town in Balochistan province. He said rescuers have been carefully removing debris from the mine as part of a rescue effort. None of the miners have been reached yet, he added.

Shahid Rind, a Balochistan government spokesman, said all available resources are being used in the rescue operation. An investigation has also been ordered to determine the cause of the collapse, he said in a statement.

Safety standards can be poor in the coal mining industry, leading to accidents and in recent years.

On Thursday, Pakistani security forces at least eight of 16 mine workers who had been kidnapped by local militants.

In neighboring India's northeastern Assam state, hopes are fading as the search resumed for a fifth day on Friday for several people trapped in a flooded coal mine.

At least on Monday morning after water gushed in from a nearby unused mine in the Umrangso area, in Dima Hasao district, about 125 miles (200 kilometers) south of the state capital, Guwahati. On Wednesday, army divers retrieved the body of a miner.

“There has been no success after army divers†found the victim as the “ill-fated mine is flooded, with water level not receding despite efforts to pump out the water,†said Kaushik Rai, a local government minister.

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Associated Press writer Wasbir Hussain contributed to this story from Guwahati, India

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