Los Angeles Times

Russia says gas blasts at mine left 36 dead

The toll includes 26 trapped and presumed to have perished.

- By Mansur Mirovalev Mirovalev is a special correspond­ent.

MOSCOW — Three explosions of methane gas at a faulty coal mine in an Arctic Russian town have killed 36 people, including f ive rescuers, officials and families said Sunday.

Two blasts tore through the Severnaya mine in the Komi region late Thursday, killing four miners and leaving 26 more trapped deep undergroun­d, Russia’s Emergencie­s Ministry said.

A third explosion killed f ive rescuers and one miner early Sunday as they were digging through the rubble to install insulated blocks with a gas that would help to quell the fire that is still raging in the mine, the Emergencie­s Ministry said.

Russia’s deputy prime minister said the 26 miners are presumed dead because of high levels of carbon monoxide and methane in the mine.

“We don’t have any hope that the 26 people left in the mine are still alive,” Arkady Dvorkovich said in televised remarks, adding that their families each will get a million rubles, or about $ 13,000.

In addition to those dead and missing, nine miners were injured, and a total of 80 people were rescued from the mine, the Emergencie­s Ministry said.

The government agency that oversees mine safety said the initial explosions had “natural causes.”

However, relatives of the dead miners insisted that the agency was aware of high levels of methane that could trigger an explosion.

The mine’s managers forced miners to block gas detectors to avoid emergency signals, the daughter of one victim charged.

“They covered them with shirts, buried the detectors,” Darya Tryasukho told the Dozhd television channel. The detectors “showed there would be trouble.”

Vorkuta, one of Russia’s largest towns above the Arctic Circle, has large coal deposits.

 ?? Russian Emergencie­s Ministr y ?? RESCUERS at the Severnaya coal mine in Vorkuta, Russia, which suffered three methane explosions.
Russian Emergencie­s Ministr y RESCUERS at the Severnaya coal mine in Vorkuta, Russia, which suffered three methane explosions.

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