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Jade mine landslide in Myanmar kills 90 people

At least 90 people have died in a huge landslide in a remote jade mining area of northern Myanmar.

Those killed were thought to have been scavenging through a mountain of waste rubble dumped by mechanical diggers used by mining companies in the area to extract Myanmar’s most valuable precious stone.

The massive landslide crushed dozens of flimsy shanty huts clustered on the barren landscape, where an unknown number of itinerant workers had made their homes in the hope of finding riches on the side of the secretive multi-billion dollar jade industry in war-torn Kachin state.

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“We found 79 dead bodies on November 21 (and) 11 today so the total so far is 90,” said Nilar Myint an official from the local administrative authorities in Hpakant, northern Kachin, adding that the rescue operation was continuing.

“We are seeing only dead bodies and no one knows how many people live there,” he told AFP, adding that only one person had been pulled alive from the rubble, but had died soon after.

Myanmar is the source of virtually all of the world’s finest jadeite, an almost translucent green stone that is prized above almost all other materials in neighbouring China.

Landslides are a common hazard in the area as people living off the industry’s waste pick their way across perilous mounds under cover of darkness, driven by the hope that they might find a chunk of jade worth thousands of dollars.

Scores have been killed this year alone as local people say the mining companies, many of which are linked to the country’s junta-era military elite, scale up their operations in Kachin.

Nilar Myint said rescuers workers from the Myanmar Red Cross, the army, police and local community groups were all at the scene trying to dig people out of the earth, but their efforts have been hampered by poor weather conditions overnight in the remote region.

In an October report, advocacy group Global Witness estimated that the value of jade produced in 2014 alone was $US31 billion ($A42.81 billion), the equivalent of nearly half the country’s GDP.

But that figure is around 10 times the official $US3.4 billion sales of the precious stone last year, in an industry that has long been shrouded in secrecy with much of the best jade thought to be smuggled directly to China.

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