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4 dead in Mexico mine collapse, 3 still missing

Mexico City: The bodies of three more miners were pulled from a small coal mine in a northern Mexico border state Sunday, bringing to four the number of confirmed dead in the flooding and partial collapse of the shaft. Three miners remained missing, and search efforts continued.

The dead miners were found at the small coal mine in Coahuila state, where there have been complaints for years about unsafe conditions at coal mines.

The federal civil defense office said rescuers had worked through the night. Officials originally said a total of six miners had been trapped, but the Coahuila state government confirmed Sunday there were seven working in the mine when the accident occurred.

President Andr s Manuel L pez Obrador said a dam or holding pond had collapsed, causing the flood.

Efforts concentrated on pumping water out of the mine. The army dispatched a 28-member team that specializes in looking for victims in collapsed structures and it was using two trained dogs at the mine.

The Micar n mine, located in Muzquiz township, appears to be a type of deep, narrow, open pit with steep earthen walls, with at least one tunnel at the bottom burrowing into the coal face. The area is about 80 miles (130 kilometers) southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas.

Coal mines in the area have been hit by deadly accidents in the past. An accident on Feb. 19, 2006, in the Pasta de Conchos mine in nearby Sabinas, Coahuila, killed 65 miners, but only two bodies were recovered.

Mexican authorities called off that search and closed the mine five days after the accident, arguing that it was unsafe due to toxic gas.

The Miguel Agustin Pro Human Rights Center published a letter from families of the miners killed in the Pasta de Conchos disaster, saying that coal mines in the area routinely violated safety codes.

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