Toronto Star

Given up for dead, miners freed after 41 days

Five of the six men trapped in a Tanzanian gold mine survived on roots, frogs, bugs

- SARAH KAPLAN

Above ground, the families of the missing gold miners accepted the inevitable and mourned their dead.

Joseph Burule Robi’s wife and four children held a funeral for him. A brother of Msafiri Gerard, the father of seven kids, inherited his sibling’s shoes. In this desperate corner of northern Tanzania, resources are scarce. A good pair of shoes can’t be left unused, not when there are so many feet unshod.

Forty days had passed since six men had descended into an unstable mining shaft in search of 11 missing colleagues. Forty days since the shaft collapsed, burying the exit and presumably the miners along with it. It was unimaginab­le that they could have survived so long. Not without food and water. Not without anyone noticing.

Unimaginab­le, yet possible. On the 41st day, after an interminab­le incarcerat­ion during which they subsisted on roots, frogs, bugs and water that dripped from the mine’s dirty ceiling, the miners were finally able to catch the attention of another group working in a shaft nearby.

Five of the men who were trapped were pulled to freedom Sunday, Tanzania’s Ministry of Energy and Mines announced on Tuesday. A sixth died of hunger during the sixweek ordeal.

Speaking to the Tanzanian newspaper the Citizen, survivor Chacha Wambura said that 20 miners were in the mine when it collapsed on Oct. 5. Fourteen escaped, but six remained trapped.

The men futilely sought a way out, scouring the mining shaft’s tunnels and passages until their headlights and cellphones ran out of power. Then they sought refuge in a cave used to store mining tools.

About 100 metres above them, local rescue teams tried to use heavy machinery to get to the missing men, but that effort also failed. On Oct. 11, six days after the collapse, Charles Kitwanga, then deputy minister for energy and minerals, announced that the trapped men were presumed dead.

“I have spoken to experts about this calamity and they have informed me that it is virtually impossible to rescue the victims,” he said, according to the Citizen.

Families began to arrange funerals, according to the BBC. One man’s wife moved back to her family in a different town.

At seven days, the stranded miners had also given up.

“We tried, without success, to tunnel our way out,” Wambura told the Citizen. “Weak and tired, we waited for the inevitable.”

Just when they’d given up, they stumbled across hope — in the form of a weak stream of light and a trickle of dirty water.

“We discovered a place where the sun’s rays shone through a crack,” Wambura said. “We also found water seeping through. This gave us a new lease of life.”

Wambura and his colleagues survived by eating cockroache­s, frogs and the bark of poles used to hold up the tunnel ceiling. Increasing­ly weak from hunger, they decided to stay together rather than separate in search of an exit. Their best hope was for someone to hear them.

On Sunday, someone finally did — a fellow miner who, like everyone else, had resigned themselves to the fact that their colleagues were long gone.

“We mentioned our names and told him what had happened to us,” Wambura said. “He told us to stay put and, after some time, we heard people digging and they eventually broke through to where we were trapped.”

The survivors are now in the hospital, where they are still very weak.

 ?? TREVOR SNAPP/BLOOMBERG ?? Six miners searching for missing colleagues on Oct. 5 were trapped 100 metres undergroun­d when the shaft collapsed.
TREVOR SNAPP/BLOOMBERG Six miners searching for missing colleagues on Oct. 5 were trapped 100 metres undergroun­d when the shaft collapsed.
 ??  ?? One of the five miners who survived 41 days trapped after the collapse.
One of the five miners who survived 41 days trapped after the collapse.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada