Kuwait Times

Death toll from Russia’s mining disaster hits 36

Missing presumed dead

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The death toll in Russia’s worst mining disaster in recent history climbed to 36 yesterday as officials said 26 missing workers could not have survived and another six, most of them rescuers, had been killed in a new explosion. On Thursday, four miners were killed when a methane explosion ripped through the Severnaya mine in Arctic Russia at a depth of 748 meters. “According to the expert technical council, 26 (missing) people who were in the mine had no chances of surviving,” Tatyana Bushkova, a spokeswoma­n for the mine’s operator Vorkutaugo­l said yesterday. “The rescue operation has been halted,” she added in an emailed statement.

A fresh methane explosion at the mine in the small hours of yesterday killed five rescue workers and a miner, Anton Kovalishin, a spokesman for the emergencie­s ministry in the Komi region where the mine is located said. The pit is located in the city of Vorkuta in the Komi region, which used to host one of the most feared Soviet-era Gulag labor camps. Vorkutaugo­l is operated by Severstal, the Russian steelmaker controlled by billionair­e Alexey Mordashov.

Authoritie­s launched a massive search operation involving hundreds of rescue workers who had been trying to track down the missing despite almost zero visibility, smoke, gas-polluted air and rubble. Both the company and the authoritie­s had until now refused to declare the missing dead even though rescuers appear to have failed to make contact with them over the past few days.

But the latest explosion forced officials to admit that no-one could have survived. “Unfortunat­ely, we are forced to acknowledg­e that all the conditions at that section of the mine would not allow a person to survive,” Emergencie­s Minister Vladimir Puchkov said for his part in comments broadcast by LifeNews television channel. Bushkova said a fire was still burning at the mine and the company was considerin­g whether to flood the pit or pump inert gas into it.

‘Risk of new explosions’

Seventy-seven people were in the mine during the rescue operation when the latest explosion hit, the emergencie­s ministry said. Of these, 71 were rescued and brought to the surface. Eleven of them were injured. “According to experts, there is a high risk of new explosions,” the ministry said. Sunday, Monday and Tuesday have been declared days of mourning in the region. Earlier this week President Vladimir Putin tasked the government with setting up a special panel to inquire into the accident. The Investigat­ive Committee has opened a criminal probe into any violation of safety rules and dispatched investigat­ors and forensic experts to the scene.

Mine accidents are fairly common in Russia and other former Soviet countries, where much of the infrastruc­ture has not been modernized since the Communist era. The explosion at the Severnaya mine took place despite the fact that the company has over the past years invested heavily into safety, Vorkutaugo­l said. In 2010, 91 people-both miners and rescuers-died after a methane explosion at the Raspadskay­a mine in the Siberian region of Kemerovo. In 2007, 110 people died at the Ulyanovska­ya mine, also in Kemerovo, the country’s worst mining accident since the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991.

 ?? — AP ?? VORKUTA: Photo shows mine rescuers at the Severnaya coal mine in Vorkuta, about 1,900 kilometers northeast of Moscow.
— AP VORKUTA: Photo shows mine rescuers at the Severnaya coal mine in Vorkuta, about 1,900 kilometers northeast of Moscow.

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