Otago Daily Times

Moves to drill more holes at Pike River

- KURT BAYER

GREYMOUTH: Police yesterday advised the families of the 29 Pike River mine explosion victims that planning is under way to drill a further 10 boreholes — months after the yearslong operation was officially concluded.

The decision to undertake further drilling at the mine comes after police consultati­on with an expert mine panel as part of the ongoing criminal investigat­ion into the first explosion at the infamous West Coat coalmine on November 19, 2010.

Detective Superinten­dent Peter Read said the families spoken to yesterday were surprised by the decision to undertake further borehole drilling but grateful for the opportunit­y it offers to gather evidence.

Some families who have long campaigned to retrieve the dead men trapped deep undergroun­d and also bring criminal charges remain hopeful that a prosecutio­n is still possible.

‘‘The previous borehole drilling operation, which ran from June 2021 to March 2022, provided police with valuable informatio­n to inform our investigat­ion into the undergroun­d activity that led to the first explosion at the mine,’’ Det Supt Read said.

It comes after police revealed in March this year that the borehole drilling operation, which started in early 2019, had ended.

Eight sets of human remains were captured in imaging taken during borehole drilling.

Over the past four months, the police investigat­ion team and the expert mine panel have been reviewing the gathered evidence.

Police say the review has establishe­d that further borehole drilling is imperative to ensure the investigat­ion team has all the informatio­n to reach a definitive conclusion.

‘‘The families of the 29 men lost at the mine have been waiting a long time for answers, and I’m very aware that in some respects this additional drilling operation could be seen as prolonging that wait,’’ Det Supt Read said.

‘‘However, I hope the decision also provides some reassuranc­e to the families that police remain absolutely committed to finding out as much as humanly possible about what led to the first explosion at the mine.’’

Police say they have had ‘‘preliminar­y conversati­ons’’ with the Department of Conservati­on and are working through a formal consent process.

Minister Responsibl­e for Pike River Reentry Andrew Little, in November, would not be drawn on whether a prosecutio­n was imminent with the police investigat­ion ongoing.

The Pike River Recovery Agency completed its $50 million reentry of the mine’s access tunnel to try to recover remains and find any forensic clues last year. But some Pike River families who lost loved ones, and had fought for years to try to get authoritie­s to try to find their bodies, launched legal action to try to stop it from happening.

On Friday, November 19, 2010, about 3.44pm, an explosion ripped through the Pike River undergroun­d coal mine, followed by subsequent explosions.

Two men made it out alive but another 29 were unaccounte­d for.

The Royal Commission on the Pike River Coal Mine tragedy found that the ‘‘immediate cause of the first explosion was the ignition of a substantia­l volume of methane gas’’, but could only speculate on what might have triggered ignition.

WorkSafe laid charges against former Pike River Coal chief executive Peter Whittall in 2013, but the case was dropped after a $3.4 million settlement was paid — a deal the Supreme Court later said was unlawful. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand