Showing posts with label accident. Show all posts
Showing posts with label accident. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 4, 2011

For Pakistan’s motorway police, honour matters

Motorway police officials have lived up to the good image of their department. In a show of honesty and professional responsibility, two officials of the police returned over a million rupees they found on the body of a person.


Sajid Ali was carrying over Rs1,086,700 in cash with him when he met a fatal accident on GT Road. According to the officials, Ali was riding a motorbike when he was hit by a car bearing registration number LEF-9850 from rear and fell on the ground.

Continue reading For Pakistan’s motorway police, honour matters

Monday, March 21, 2011

Pakistan coal mine blast death toll hits 45, survivors unlikely

Mon Mar 21, 2011 9:14am GMT

By Gul Yusafzai

QUETTA, Pakistan (Reuters) - The death toll from Sunday's methane gas explosions in a coal mine in Pakistan's southwestern province of Baluchistan rose to 45 on Monday, government officials said, as hopes faded there would be any survivors from the disaster.

More than 50 miners were in the mine when three big explosions triggered by methane gas ripped through the caverns.

"Forty-five miners have died. We have retrieved 25 bodies so far," Aslam Bizenjo, provincial irrigation minister, told the provincial assembly.

Officials said the chances of finding the trapped workers alive were very slim because of a fire, which had consumed all the oxygen. Witnesses said the bodies had severe burns from the huge fire.

The mine, some 35 km (22 miles) from the provincial capital, Quetta, is owned by the state-run Pakistan Mineral Development Corporation and was leased to a contractor.

Mohammad Iftikhar, chief inspector of mines in the region, said the contactor had been asked to shut down the mine two weeks ago because of an excessive accumulation of methane gas.

Such explosions are not uncommon in coal mines in Pakistan, most of which are located in Baluchistan and neighbouring Sindh, where safety measures can be lax.

The country has huge coal reserves estimated at more than 184 billion tonnes. It produces 4 million tonnes of coal annually, most of which is consumed by brick-making kilns.