Trapped
miners survive on coal, urine diet
Tue
Aug 28, 2007 5:09PM EDT
BEIJING
(Reuters) - Two Chinese brothers who tunnelled their way out of a coal mine collapse
after being trapped for nearly six days survived by eating coal and drinking urine,
a local newspaper reported Tuesday.
Brothers
Meng Xianchen and Meng Xianyou became trapped while working at an illegal mine
in Beijing's Fangshan District late Saturday, August 18, the latest in a series
of disasters to strike the world's deadliest coal mining industry.
Two
days later, rescue efforts were called off and relatives began burning "ghost
money" at the entrance of the mine for the dearly departed.
"At
first there was no feeling, but then I was so hungry I couldn't crawl any more,"
Xianchen told the Beijing News. "I got so hungry, I ate a piece of coal,
and I thought it quite fragrant.
"Actually,
coal is bitter and unsmooth but you can chew up pieces the size of a finger. In
the mine, we picked up two discarded water bottles, and drank our urine. You can
only take small sips, and when you've finished, you just want to cry."
He
said because they were eating coal, and were in the mine for nearly six days,
they did not defecate.
"We
were only able to do that the day before yesterday in hospital. It was full of
coal."
Both
said they would not go back into mining.
But
their younger brother, Meng Xianjun, who has a decade of experience in the mines,
cut in to the interview to add: "I'll still do it."
Chinese
mine owners regularly flout safety regulations to meet insatiable demand for a
fuel powering the country's booming economy
A
gas explosion in an Inner Mongolian mine that was operating illegally killed seven
people Saturday, as officials began handing compensation to families of 181 miners
trapped and presumed dead after a flood last week in eastern China.
But
in a second miraculous rescue, four builders trapped more than a week ago inside
a collapsed tunnel at a hydropower project in the southwestern province of Yunnan
were pulled out alive early Tuesday, Xinhua news agency reported.
Rescuers
in Yunnan's Yingjiang County dug an extra passage to reach the workers and used
a ventilation pipe to carry food and drinking water to the four, who were being
treated in a local hospital following their rescue.