The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Scotsman will go into Pike River blast mine, where Fife and Perth men died

The bodies of deceased should be retrieved so that families will be able to put them to rest

- CHERYL PEEBLES cpeebles@thecourier.co.uk

A Scotsman will be among the first to re-enter the New Zealand mine where two men from Courier Country were killed eight years ago.

Tony Forster, considered one of the world’s most experience­d miners, has been chosen by the families of the lost Pike River miners.

Malcolm Campbell, 25, of St Andrews, and Pete Rodger, 40, of Perth, were among 29 who died in the disaster in the South Island mine in November 2010.

Families of the two men and their colleagues have endured an agonising wait to learn if the bodies of their loved ones will be brought out.

Mr Forster, who was brought up in a mining family in Prestonpan­s in East Lothian will be part of a team from the Pike River Recovery Agency, who will begin their mission in February.

He has been chosen by the families as their independen­t advisor.

New Zealand’s chief mining inspector after the tragedy, he has worked undergroun­d for 46 years and been involved in five major rescue and recovery operations.

He told New Zealand’s Newshub: “It is a massive privilege.

“Unfortunat­ely, circumstan­ces have arisen where I have probably done it more than anyone else.”

Mr Forster has always believed re-entry was safe, and said: “It is both doable and, yes, it can be done safely.”

Starting in February, the team will re-enter the 7,550ft access tunnel, including an unexplored area with an electrical substation, which it is thought could give answers as to what caused the explosion.

It has been suggested that a second explosion – which dashed hopes some of the men had survived the first blast and could have been brought out alive – was caused by a conveyor belt being turned on during the rescue attempt.

New Zealand’s previous government deemed it unsafe for people to enter the mine due to high levels of methane, but the present coalition government pledged an operation to attempt recovery.

Despite police and expert opinion that bodies were likely to have been incinerate­d in the blast, video footage from inside the mine is said to show a fully clothed miner lying on the ground.

It is a massive privilege. It is both, doable and, yes, it can be done safely

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 ?? Picture: AP. ?? The entrance to the Pike River mine.
Picture: AP. The entrance to the Pike River mine.
 ??  ?? Malcolm Campbell died in the 2010 disaster.
Malcolm Campbell died in the 2010 disaster.

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