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21 confirmed dead in north China coal mine flood

Rescue workers search for victims at a coal mine that flooded on April 20, 2015 in Datong, Shanxi province of China. The coal mine in east China's Shanxi province, owned by Datong Coal Mine Group, flooded yesterday. ChinaFotoPress via Getty Images

BEIJING – Search teams have recovered the bodies of 21 Chinese coal miners who died when the shaft where they were working filled with water, an official said Thursday.

After days of frantic rescue efforts following the accident Sunday, the final death toll of 21 was confirmed Thursday by a Datong city government official who gave only his surname, Meng. More than 600 rescuers had been working to pump water from the shaft and drill holes from the surface at the Jiangjiawan mine near the northern city of Datong.

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A total of 247 miners were underground when water rushed into the shaft Sunday evening.

Of those, 223 people made it safely to the surface while three of those trapped were rescued and were recovering in hospital.

Such accidents are usually caused by breaches of abandoned shafts where water has collected over time.

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China has seen a dramatic drop in accidental deaths in its notoriously dangerous mines, partly as a result of improved safety measures but also because of falling coal production levels as the slowing economy reduces demand.

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