China safety watchdog said
Wednesday that coal mine safety officials were barred from taking
gifts or accepting patronage from coal producers to purchase office
apartments or autos.
The announcement was made after media revealed that
the Shanxi Xinzhou Coal Mine Safety Administration
had borrowed 2.09 million yuan (US$0.27 million) from local coal
mines to buy office apartments and accepted a gift of 380,000 yuan
(US$50,000) to purchase cars.
Investigations showed the Xinzhou administration in
coal-rich Shanxi Province had a work area of around 2,550 square
meters for a total of 10 employees, and 12 offices were suites with
individual bathrooms, according to the State Administration of Work
Safety (SAWS).
Every employee with the Xinzhou administration enjoyed
a working area of more than 250 square meters on average -- bigger
than a three- or four-bedroom apartment for a household of five
with handsome salaries in Beijing.
However, regulations of the State Administration of
Coal Mine Safety (SACMS) said the office area for each employee at
coal mine supervision administrations should be no more than 55
square meters.
The Xinzhou administration was also found to have
purchased four sedan cars, exclusively for the use of its senior
officials, with gifts from local coal mines, although senior
officials of local administrations were not allowed to have cars
for their exclusive use.
Domestic brand autos of no more than two liters are
recommended by SACMS regulations.
The SAWS figures show that coal mine accidents killed
4,746 people in China in 2006. On average, 17 miners lose their
lives every day in Chinese coal mines.
Local administrations which fail to properly supervise
mines bear a significant share of the responsibility for the woeful
safety record of the country's coal mines, work safety authorities
said.
(Xinhua News Agency May 17, 2007)
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