The World's #1 Russian, Ukrainian & Eastern European Discussion & Information Forum - RUA!

This Is the Premier Discussion Forum on the Net for Information and Discussion about Russia, Ukraine, Eastern Europe and the Former Soviet Union. Discuss Culture, Politics, Travelling, Language, International Relationships and More. Chat with Travellers, Locals, Residents and Expats. Ask and Answer Questions about Travel, Culture, Relationships, Applying for Visas, Translators, Interpreters, and More. Give Advice, Read Trip Reports, Share Experiences and Make Friends.

Author Topic: 28 killed in Ukraine mine blast  (Read 1780 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

Offline Chris

  • Moderator
  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 14372
  • Country: england
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouses Country: Chernivtsi, Ukraine
  • Status: Married
  • Trips: 20+
28 killed in Ukraine mine blast
« on: November 18, 2007, 03:02:07 PM »
KIEV, Ukraine - A methane blast ripped through a coal mine in eastern Ukraine early Sunday, killing at least 28 miners and leaving dozens of others trapped, emergency officials said.

The explosion occurred at the Zasyadka mine in the Donetsk region at a depth of more than 3,280 feet at around 3 a.m., said Emergency Situations Ministry spokesman Ihor Krol.

Rescue workers have found the bodies of 28 miners, and several dozen others have remained trapped, Krol said. Rescue authorities were working to bring them to the surface.

Several hundred workers were in the mine when the explosion occurred, although only around 30 were in the immediate area of the blast, officials said.

The Donetsk region is about 400 miles southeast of the capital, Kiev.

Ukrainian mines are among the world's most dangerous. The mines can run deep and often use out-of-date equipment.

More and Pictures here

.

Слава Україні

Offline Olga_Mouse

  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 3384
  • Country: ru
  • Gender: Female
  • Trips: Resident
Re: 28 killed in Ukraine mine blast
« Reply #1 on: November 19, 2007, 03:36:22 AM »

Already 70 - as more dead bodies have been found...  :(
Leaving Russia is not an emigration, rather an evacuation.

Offline mendeleyev

  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 12846
  • Country: us
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouses Country: Russia
  • Status: Married
  • Trips: 20+
Re: 28 killed in Ukraine mine blast
« Reply #2 on: November 19, 2007, 04:25:33 PM »
Such a sad event for the miner's families.  The social net to bolster these families who have lost the major family income-earner is not very developed.  It appears the death toll may rise like the Shakhty mine disaster a few years ago.


Offline Chris

  • Moderator
  • Member
  • *
  • Posts: 14372
  • Country: england
  • Gender: Male
  • Spouses Country: Chernivtsi, Ukraine
  • Status: Married
  • Trips: 20+
Re: 28 killed in Ukraine mine blast
« Reply #3 on: November 25, 2007, 10:47:13 AM »
At least 77 are now dead, in one of Ukraine's deadliest mining disasters of the post-Soviet era, and a day later......

DONETSK, Ukraine - Rescuers struggled against flames and fallen rock in trying to reach 23 miners trapped in a coal mine Monday, a day after a methane blast killed at least 77.

Nearly 360 miners at the massive Zasyadko mine scrambled to the surface after Sunday's blast, which occurred at a depth of about 1,000 meters (3,300 feet).

One survivor described clambering over the bodies of his co-workers strewn along an underground rail track and navigating through blinding dust to escape.

The hunt for survivors was still under way Monday afternoon, but rescuers were battling a stubborn fire that blocked their path to the tunnel where the missing were believed to be trapped. The tunnel was also blocked by a rockslide triggered by the explosion, emergency officials said.

Above ground in this industrial city in eastern Ukraine, the heart of the former Soviet republic's coal country, flags flew at half-staff as the Donetsk region began three days of official mourning.

Dozens of weeping relatives gathered at the mine's Soviet-era headquarters, waiting anxiously for news of their loved ones. As grim-faced officials emerged to announce the names of the workers found dead, the relatives broke into sobs and cries; some fainted.

Authorities dispatched a team of psychologists to help relatives cope with their grief.

"My son works here. He doesn't answer his mobile phone," a sobbing middle-aged woman told Associated Press Television News. She declined to give her name. "I don't know what's happened. He is not at home. ... He has three little children."

The deadliest accident in Ukraine's coal industry in at least seven years highlighted the lack of attention to safety in a country with some of the world's most dangerous mines.

President Viktor Yushchenko accused his Cabinet on Sunday of not doing enough to reform coal mining, and ordered an official panel to investigate the accident and bring those responsible to account.

Prime Minister Viktor Yanukovych, a native of the mining region, visited the site about 730 kilometers (450 miles) southeast of Kiev, pledging to help victims' families.

Yanukovych, Yushchenko's political rival, suggested the disaster was not caused by safety violations or human error, saying a safety watchdog had reported that miners were working in accordance with norms.

"This accident has proven once again that a human is powerless before nature," he said.

Twenty-eight of the 356 miners evacuated were hospitalized, said Emergency Situations Minister Mykola Ranha. Earlier, emergency officials had said 367 miners had been evacuated.

Survivor Vitaliy Kvitkovsky recounted a grisly escape.

"The temperature increased sharply, and there was so much dust that I couldn't see anything. ... So I was moving by touch over dead bodies along the rail track," Kvitkovsky said in footage on Channel 5 television.

Experts say Ukraine's mines are dangerous largely because they are so deep, typically running more than 1,000 meters (3,280 feet) underground. Most European coal beds lie at a depth of 500 to 600 meters (1,640 to 1,970 feet).

More than 75 percent of Ukraine's roughly 200 coal mines are classified as dangerous due to high levels of methane, a natural byproduct of mining whose concentration increases with depth.

Mines must be ventilated to prevent explosions, but some rely on outdated ventilation equipment, officials said. Safety violations and negligence add to the problem.

The blast was the deadliest mine accident in Ukraine since an explosion at the Barakova mine in the neighboring Lugansk region killed 81 miners in March 2000.

The Zasyadko mine is one of the biggest and best-paying mines in the region, but salaries are low compared with most of Europe. Natalia Piskun, whose husband was believed trapped underground, said he earned some 2,000 hryvna (US$400; -270) a month, nearly twice the average wage in Ukraine.

But the mine has been plagued by disaster. Last year, a blast there killed 13 workers. In 2002, an explosion killed 20 and 54 died in a similar explosion in 2001. In May 1999, 50 miners were killed in a methane and coal dust blast there.

The mine's office is in central Donetsk, and its kilometers (miles) of shafts and tunnels are sprawled beneath the city. One of its emergency exits is located near a city cemetery used to bury miners killed in accidents here.

Yekaterina Kirichenko, a retired engineer, came to the mine to support a friend whose son was killed. Kirichenko, 73, accused regional authorities of failinз to observe safety rules and invest in safety upgrades.

"Our government doesn't care about people, all they need is dollars," Kirichenko said, weeping. "Those oligarchs are building cottages for themselves and pay no attention to thе mine. They're killing our children."


Since the 1991 Soviet collapse, more than 4,700 miners in Ukraine have been killed. For every 1 million tons of coal brought to the surface in Ukraine, three miners lose their lives, according to official data.
Слава Україні


 

 

Registration