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Three killed at US giant Freeport's Indonesia mine

File picture shows security staff at the Freeport McMoRan Grasberg mining complex, one of the world's biggest gold and copper mines, located in Indonesia's remote eastern Papua province

Three security personnel were found dead with bullet and machete wounds at a US-owned Freeport-McMoRan copper and gold mine in eastern Indonesia, local police said Friday. The three -- one security employee and two police officers on duty at the mine -- were on patrol at the huge Grasberg complex in Papua province before they were found dead late Thursday. Police found deep gashes on the three bodies as well as bullet wounds on one of them, Papua police spokesman Patrick Renwarin said. "We still don't know the cause of the deaths yet as we are still waiting for the full report," Renwarin said. Freeport Indonesia said the area where the patrol vehicle was found had been sealed for police investigation. Pro-independence militants have waged a low-level insurgency against Indonesian rule in Papua, which is off-limits to foreign journalists without special permission. Grasberg, one of the biggest copper and gold mines in the world, has been plagued by accidents and production problems in recent years. In May 2013, a training tunnel collapsed killing 28 miners as they took part in a safety course in one of Indonesia's worst-ever mining accidents. In 2011 a three-month strike crippled production at the mine, and workers only halted the industrial action once Freeport agreed to a huge pay rise.