The Columbus Dispatch

51 presumed dead in Russia coal mine

- Dasha Litvinova

MOSCOW – Russian authoritie­s on Friday released the names of 51 people presumed dead after a devastatin­g methane explosion in a coal mine in Siberia, believed to be the deadliest since 2010.

The list with names of 46 miners and five rescuers was published online by the government of the Kemerovo region in southweste­rn Siberia, where the mine is located. Authoritie­s had initially reported 52 possible fatalities, but search teams on Friday found a survivor in what officials described as a “miracle.”

A total of 285 miners were in the Listvyazhn­aya mine at the time of explosion on Thursday morning that quickly filled the mine with toxic smoke; 239 people were rescued shortly after the blast, and more than 60 sought medical assistance for an assortment of injuries.

Officials on Thursday confirmed 14 fatalities: 11 miners and three rescuers who died while searching for others

trapped in a remote section of the mine. Rescuers were forced to halt several hours into their search because of a buildup of methane and carbon monoxide gas.

Rescuer Alexander Zakovryash­in was pulled out of the rubble Friday morning still conscious. He was hospitaliz­ed with moderate carbon monoxide poisoning, according to emergency officials.

“I can consider it a miracle,” acting Emergency Minister Alexander Chupriyan said.

Kemerovo Governor Sergei Tsivilyov said Friday that finding other survivors was unlikely.

It was the deadliest mine accident in Russia since 2010, when two methane explosions and a fire killed 91 people at the Raspadskay­a mine in the same Kemerovo region.

In 2016, 36 miners were killed in a series of methane explosions in a coal mine in Russia’s far north. In the wake of the incident, authoritie­s analyzed the safety of the country’s 58 coal mines and declared 20 of them potentiall­y unsafe. Media reports say the Listvyazhn­aya mine wasn’t among them, however in 2004 a methane explosion in the mine killed 13 people.

Russia’s top independen­t news site, Meduza, reported that this year authoritie­s suspended the work of certain sections of the mine nine times and fined the mine more than 4 million rubles (roughly $53,000) for safety violations.

 ?? AP ?? An explosion in a Siberian coal mine Thursday left dozens of miners and rescuers dead about 820 feet undergroun­d, Russian officials said.
AP An explosion in a Siberian coal mine Thursday left dozens of miners and rescuers dead about 820 feet undergroun­d, Russian officials said.

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