Bangkok Post

Rescue bid on to save 10 trapped miners

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SUTATAUSA: Rescuers and miners raced against the clock on Wednesday to save 10 workers trapped in a central Colombian coal mine after an explosion killed at least 11 people.

With oxygen fast running out for any survivors, family members outside the mine waited wrapped in woolen ponchos against the cold, desperate for news of their loved ones.

Separated from the accident site by a barbed wire barricade, they watched as a machine pumped water out of a mine shaft.

President Gustavo Petro called it “an unfortunat­e tragedy”, in a Twitter message.

“We are making every effort with the Cundinamar­ca regional government to rescue the trapped people alive,” he said, offering “a hug of solidarity to the victims and their families.”

National mining agency ANM said two workers had been rescued from the mine at Sutatausa.

“We regret what happened and we stand in solidarity with the families of those affected,” ANM posted on Twitter.

A build-up of methane gas apparently triggered the Tuesday night explosion in the undergroun­d complex, Sutatausa municipali­ty’s mayor Jaime Arevalo said.

He confirmed the death toll and said relief agencies are working to locate the missing miners, who are believed to be trapped some 900 metres (2,950 feet) undergroun­d.

“When the explosion occurred, all the pumping, drainage and lighting systems collapsed,” the mayor added.

He described the rescue effort as “very complex”, saying oxygen was running out and water was “beginning to accumulate”.

Governor Nicolas Garcia of Cundinamar­ca department said the accumulate­d gases in the mine were ignited by a spark from a worker’s tool.

He told Blu Radio more than 100 rescuers were involved in the search, adding: “Every minute that passes means less oxygen” for those missing.

Survivor Joselito Rodriguez, 33, said by telephone that he felt a “tremor” while working and then, “I felt I was suffocatin­g, and could not see anything.”

“Thank God we got out safely, but others are dead,” he said shortly after leaving the hospital where he received treatment.

Workers from other mines also rushed to the scene with their yellow hard hats and flashlight­s to join rescue efforts led by firefighte­rs and rescue teams.

The explosion happened at a legal coal mine linked undergroun­d to five others.

Oil and coal are the main exports of Colombia, where mining accidents are frequent, especially at illegal digs in Cundinamar­ca and other department­s in the country’s centre and northeast.

Colombia registered more than 1,260 mining accidents from 2011 to May 2022, for an average annual toll of 103 deaths, according to official data.

At least 130,000 people make a legal living from mining in Colombia.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Colombian military personnel attend the scene following a mine explosion in Sutatausa, Cundinamar­ca department, Colombia, on Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG Colombian military personnel attend the scene following a mine explosion in Sutatausa, Cundinamar­ca department, Colombia, on Wednesday.

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