The Punggye-ri test site in North Korea is carved deep into Mount Mantap, as these file images show
The disaster has prompted fears of a massive radioactive leak which could spark a Chernobyl- or Fukushima-style disaster.
A North Korean official said the collapse happened during the construction of an underground tunnel, South Korea’s Yonhap news agency reports.
Some 100 people are said to have been trapped by the initial tunnel collapse, with a further 100 lost in a second collapse during a rescue operation, Asahi reported Tuesday.
Lee Eugene, a spokeswoman at South Korea's unification ministry, said: "We are aware of the report but do not know anything about it."
The accident is believed to have been caused by Kim Joing-un’s sixth nuclear test which weakened the mountain, according to the report.
The mountain where the test site is hidden is seen before the last nuclear testPLANET LABS, INC
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The mountain where the test site is hidden is seen before the last nuclear test
Satellite images show Mount Mantap pock-marked with craters from landslides after the last nuclear testAIRBUS DS / SPOT IMAGE
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Satellite images show Mount Mantap pock-marked with craters from landslides after the last nuclear test
A close-up of a subsidence crater show scarring from landslides after the testsAIRBUS DS / SPOT IMAGE
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A close-up of a subsidence crater show scarring from landslides after the tests
Another image shows where the nuclear tests are believed to have taken placePLANET LABS, INC.
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Another image shows where the nuclear tests are believed to have taken place
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It was reported earlier this year that the mountain under which the base is believed to be hidden was at risk of collapsing and leaking radiation into the region.
Experts said if the peak crumbles, clouds of radioactive dust and gas would blanket the region, the South China Morning Post reported.
The Punggye-ri test site is carved deep into the side of Mount Mantap.
Geophysicist Wen Lianxing and his team at the University of Science and Technology of China in Hefei, Anhui province, said they were “confident” underground detonations were occurring underneath the mountain.
A satellite image taken on April 12, 2017 of a North Korean Punggye-ri test sitePLEIADES CNES/AIRBUS DS/38 NORTH/SPOT IMAGE
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A satellite image taken on April 12, 2017 of a North Korean Punggye-ri test site
North Korea state media celebrates its missile capability
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North Korea state media celebrates its missile capabilitySatellite images show the area around North Korea's Punggye-ri nuclear test siteREUTERS
12Satellite images show the area around North Korea's Punggye-ri nuclear test site
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