At least seven workers at a small gold mine in southern Peru have died in what is believed to be an accident, local police reported on Thursday.
The victims' bodies were discovered 1.5 km (0.93 miles) deep in the mine with injuries to their extremities, local police chief Enrique Felipe Monroy told radio station RPP.
Monroy said that initial evidence pointed to a collapse in the mine in the town of La Rinconada. In the region, hundreds of small mines operate, many of them without proper legal permissions.
In Peru, the world's second-largest copper producer and seventh-largest gold producer collapses or accidents are frequent at informal or illegal mines, where workers dig out ore without following safety or environmental regulations.
Earlier this month, nine security employees of a major gold producer in northern Peru were killed in an armed attack on the mine, which the government and the miners blamed on "criminal gangs" acting on behalf of illegal miners.


US Epstein files release highlights Clinton, makes scant reference to Trump
US hits ISIS in Syria with large retaliatory strikes, officials say
Pakistan court hands Imran Khan, wife 17-year jail terms in another graft case
Seven elephants killed in India train accident
Israeli attack on school shelter in Gaza City kills 5 Palestinians
Nine injured in attack in Taipei, media reports
Putin offers no compromise on Ukraine, says EU 'robbery' failed
Bangladesh rocked by unrest after death of student leader
