‘Hope waning’ for trapped Turkish miners
ISTANBUL: Hopes are fading of saving 18 miners trapped by a flood in a mine in southern Turkey, the energy minister acknowledged on Thursday, blaming negligence for the country’s latest mining tragedy.
“Time is ticking by. I have to tell you that hope is waning concerning our 18 worker brothers,” said Energy Minister Taner Yildiz, who is at the scene of the disaster in the Karaman province.
“It is not just because of the water. It is because of the tonnes of mud and waste that have crashed down into the pits,” he added in televised comments.
Tuesday’s accident was the latest to hit the country’s disaster-prone mining industry after 301 workers were killed in a coal mine explosion in Soma in May.
Some 400 emergency workers are still at the scene in the village of Pamuklu, trying to siphon out an estimated 10 tonnes of water that burst into the shaft and broke down the its walls on Tuesday.
Both Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday visited the area in a clear bid to show that the government was on top of the rescue efforts.
Erdogan was vehemently criticised over his handling of the Soma disaster, when he notoriously said such a catastrophe was part of the job, comparing it to mining disasters in 19th-century Britain.
The private company that operates the mine, Has Sekerler, on Thursday broke two days of silence to say that the accident was due an unspecified “natural disaster”.
It said in a statement that it had taken “all the necessary security measures” and its conclusion was based on evidence from the 16 miners who had escaped from the shaft.
Published in Dawn, October 30th, 2014