Global Times

Turkey jails five mine bosses for negligence in 2014 disaster that killed 301

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A Turkish court on Wednesday handed jail terms of up to 22 years to five top managers convicted of negligence over Turkey’s worst-ever mining disaster, which claimed hundreds of lives.

The accident in May 2014 killed 301 people when one of the pits of the Soma mine became engulfed by flames and carbon monoxide gas, trapping 800 miners working inside.

The tragedy sparked protests and raised new concerns about Turkey’s dire industrial safety record.

Relatives and the opposition denounced Wednesday’s verdicts – handed out on negligence rather than murder conviction­s – as outrageous­ly lenient after prosecutor­s had initially demanded terms of 301 times 25 years for all the main suspects.

After a trial lasting over three years, the court in the western Turkish town of Akhisar jailed the former CEO of the Soma mine, Can Gurkan, for 15 years, the state-run Anadolu news agency said.

The mine’s general manager Ramazan Dogru and technical manager Ismail Adali were handed prison sentences of 22 years and six months, and operations manager Akin Celik and technical supervisor Ertan Ersoy 18 years and nine months, it added.

The chairman of the Soma Mines Company which owned the mine, Alp Gurkan, the father of Can Gurkan, was acquitted along with 36 other suspects.

Out of 51 suspects on trial, nine other lower-ranking mine managers were given jail terms of six to 11 years.

The Dogan news agency said the verdicts prompted victims’ lawyers and families to walk out of court in protest. Emergency services needed to be called as several collapsed due to stress, it added.

The opposition Republican People’s Party slammed the sentences, which it said were drawn up in advance as a result of pressure from the company and the authoritie­s.

“Justice has not come for Soma and... the law has, once again, gone bankrupt,” its deputy chairman Veli Agbaba said in a statement.

Alp Gurkan had denied responsibi­lity for the disaster, asking when the trial opened in April 2015 to be freed “to do our own research and shed light on the accident.”

Turkey’s Confederat­ion of Progressiv­e Trade Unions expressed outrage that the conviction­s had been made on the lesser negligence charges, arguing the mine had failed to take necessary precaution­s and had overworked its employees.

“Three hundred and one of our worker brothers lost their lives before our eyes as a result of a slaughter,” said its Chairwoman Arzu Cerkezoglu.

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