Manawatu Standard

Bernie Monk’s first visit inside Pike River mine

- Maddison Northcott and Joanne Carroll

The father of one of the 29 men killed when Pike River mine exploded says it was ‘‘bloody freezing’’ when he went into the mine for the first time.

On November 19, 2010, a methane blast at the West Coast mine trapped and killed the workers inside, where they remain today.

Bernie Monk, whose son Michael died in the disaster, entered the mine last Thursday with Newshub journalist Patrick Gower.

It was the closest he’d been to his son in eight years, Monk said.

He took time to think about his son and the other 28 men still in the mine but the experience wasn’t as moving as he expected, he said.

‘‘Going in wasn’t as emotional as I thought it was going to be,’’ he said. ‘‘It didn’t achieve much for me. You don’t move on, you move forward.’’

He entered the mine because he wanted ‘‘to show the country that the families are prepared to go in’’, he said.

When he entered the portal it was 96.5 per cent methane beyond the 30m seal.

The agency planned to purge the mine of methane using nitrogen and then allow fresh air in to the end of the drift, or mine access tunnel.

‘‘It’s bloody freezing in there,’’ Monk said.

‘‘You can see the icicles on the roof, that’s how cold it is.’’

The Pike River Agency had allowed the families access to the mine portal and several had already been into the mine drift in April, including Pike Family representa­tives Anna Osborne and Sonya Rockhouse.

Monk and the majority of the families of the 29 men have been fighting for the mine drift to be recovered and accountabi­lity for the disaster.

Several years ago, Mines Rescue went up to 300 metres and put in a seal at 170m and 30m. Monk said he wanted to know who told them to stop at 300m.

‘‘It should have been done seven years ago. I am challengin­g the lawmakers that you cannot kill 29 men in the workplace and have no-one brought to account,’’ Monk said.

He had been to the portal several times before for anniversar­ies, when Solid Energy owned the mine, but was never allowed in.

Solid Energy kept the access road locked and ‘‘treated the families like criminals’’ when they began a protest against permanentl­y sealing the mine in 2016, he said.

The mine was deemed too dangerous to re-enter by the National Government and Solid Energy, which bought the mine after the disaster, but technical experts are working on a plan to re-enter the 2.3-kilometre access tunnel (or drift) to recover bodies and gather any evidence to find out how the explosion happened. Re-entry could start at the end of 2018.

The previous Government also said the mine could not be reentered because of health and safety legislatio­n brought in as a result of the Pike River disaster.

National Party spokesman for Pike River re-entry Chris Finlayson earlier said the decision not to re-enter the mine

‘‘It’s bloody freezing in there. You can see the icicles on the roof, that’s how cold it is.’’ Bernie Monk

was based on the advice of Solid Energy that while manned reentry was technicall­y possible, it could not be done safely without putting lives at risk.

‘‘We were not willing to take that risk.’’

Monk, who has laboured on behalf of some of the families, earlier said he had been ignored and ‘‘fobbed off’’ in his fight for justice but always knew police would ‘‘turn up back on the doorstep’’.

Police Commission­er Mike Bush met families for the first time since police closed the case in 2013 to ‘‘express police support for the re-entry planning’’.

Monk said it was yet to be seen whether police claims that they were open to laying new criminal charges were legitimate.

In 2013, all 12 charges laid against former Pike River Coal boss Peter Whittall were dropped, and the families were told there was not enough evidence to pursue manslaught­er charges, but in June the country’s top police officers prepared to open a new investigat­ion explosion.

The new investigat­ion was reliant on access being gained to the mine’s access tunnel or drift.

 ??  ?? Bernie Monk at the Pike River mine portal last Thursday.
Bernie Monk at the Pike River mine portal last Thursday.

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