Six workers have been confirmed dead and fears are fading for 15 others following the collapse of a mine in Zimbabwe.
Emergency responders are in a race against time to find the miners who are still trapped underground after a gold mine collapsed on Friday. State-run Zimbabwe Broadcasting Corporation quoted deputy mines minister Polite Kambamura as saying 34 miners had been caught in the collapse. It is estimated that 13 people managed to escape.
The rescue operation is taking place at Beyhose mine in the gold-rich town of Chegutu, about 100 kilometers west of the capital, Harare. Incidents of mine collapses, often involving artisanal miners, are rampant in the southern African country that is rich in gold, coal and diamonds.
The country of 15 million people also has Africa's largest reserves of lithium, a mineral in global demand due to its use in electric car batteries. Zimbabwe's mineral-rich national parks, abandoned mines, rivers and even towns are often swarmed with people, including young children, seeking to find valuable deposits - it is one of the few economic activities still going on in a country that has suffered industry closures, a currency crisis and rampant unemployment over the past two decades.