Bangkok Post

Five miners freed after 41 days trapped undergroun­d

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DAR-ES-SALAAM: Five Tanzanian gold miners have been rescued after spending 41 days trapped deep undergroun­d eating cockroache­s and frogs to survive, the mining ministry and survivors said yesterday.

The miners were among a group of around 20 that were in a pit when a shaft they were working on collapsed on Oct 5.

While 14 escaped as the shaft collapsed, six were trapped. One of the miners died during the more than month-long incarcerat­ion undergroun­d.

The remaining five were rescued on Sunday and are reportedly in a serious condition in hospital.

“The miners were very weak,” Minister of Energy and Mines spokeswoma­n Badra Masoud said, adding they had been trapped some 100m undergroun­d.

Survivors have described the horror of surviving in the darkness for more than a month so deep undergroun­d, sheltering in a chamber where they had stored their tools, eating insects and sipping foul and muddy water to survive.

“We were around 20 in the pit that collapsed. Some of our colleagues made it out, but six remained trapped undergroun­d,” survivor Chacha Wambura told stateowned television on Monday.

“We survived by eating cockroache­s, frogs and other insects as well as drinking dirty water that seeped in from above.”

The local miners were digging for gold in the northweste­rn Shinyanga region when the shaft collapsed behind them.

Initially they had the light from their helmet lamps as well as from mobile phones, but they soon ran out.

“Batteries of the torches and flashlight­s ran out and we ended up in a cave that we earlier used as a store for our tools,” Mr Wambura said.

Tanzanian newspaper The Citizen said the Mining Ministry described the rescue as “a miracle” while local officials were initially in disbelief the miners could have been freed safely after so long undergroun­d.

Local police commander Justus Kamugisha said the miners were all believed to have died in the collapse, but that other miners crawling down a separate shaft were startled to hear voices coming from the darkness.

“They heard voices of people calling out for help,” Mr Kamugisha said.

“The men left the mines because they thought the voices were evil spirits, but they reported it to the local officials and they remembered the miners who had been trapped some days earlier.”

Rescue efforts were launched on Saturday, finally freeing the five still alive the following day.

“We are still trying to locate the body of the dead miner, who is said to have died 15 days before the rescue operations,” Mr Kamugisha added.

Tanzania is Africa’s fourth largest gold producer.

Collapse of artisanal, or small-scale independen­t, mines are frequent, with miners often using basic tools and with little serious ability to shore up and secure the deep and narrow shafts they dig.

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