Army Launches Mission to Rescue Miners Trapped in Coal Mine in Assam | Current Affairs | Vision IAS
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Army Launches Mission to Rescue Miners Trapped in Coal Mine in Assam

Posted 07 Jan 2025

Updated 08 Jan 2025

1 min read

Nine workers were trapped in a flooded rat-hole coal mine in Umrangso, Dima Hasao district, Assam that borders Meghalaya

About Rat Hole Mining  

  • Mining Mechanism: Rat-hole mining involves digging narrow tunnels, usually 3-4 feet high, where workers (often children) enter and extract coal.  
    • The horizontal tunnels are often termed "rat-holes", as each just about fits one person. 
    • It is mostly practised in Meghalaya. 
  • Reasons for prevalence: 
    • Natural Factors:  Thin coal seams make rat-hole mining more economical than open-cast methods.
      • Difficult terrain and high costs discourage advanced drilling methods.coal seams in Meghalaya are very thin. This, miners say, makes rat-hole mining more economically viable than opencast mining
    • Governance issues: Sixth Schedule protects tribal rights over land under the Constitution.
      • Landowners are considered owners of minerals beneath, and it is believed that Coal Mines Nationalisation Act of 1973 does not apply to these mines.
  • Legal Status: In 2014, National Green Tribunal (NGT) banned rat hole mining in Meghalaya stating it is unscientific and unsafe for workers.   The Ban was upheld by Supreme Court.
An image showing consequences of Rat Hole Mining
  • Tags :
  • NGT
  • Sixth Schedule
  • Rat-Hole Miniing
  • Coal Mining
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