An explosion followed by a fire in a coal mine in western Turkey killed seventeen miners today and trapped 200 more, Turkish officials said, in what appeared to be the country's worst mining accident in years.
The blast in the power unit of the mine in Soma, around 120 km northeast of the Aegean coastal city of Izmir, triggered an electricity outage, making the elevators unusable and leaving hundreds of workers stranded underground.
Television footage showed thousands of fellow workers and relatives gathering outside the local hospital in Soma, a coal mining community in Turkey‘s western province of Manisa.
Government officials feared the death toll might be on the rise. “Unfortunately, we could see a grimmer picture. Looks like it will be a very tough night. The death toll may rise but the rescue teams are working hard,“ one government official said.
Because the explosion took place during a change in shifts, there was uncertainty over the exact number of miners still inside, but Turkey‘s Disaster and Emergency Management Presidency (AFAD) put the figure at more than 200.
Manisa mayor Cengin Ergun had earlier put the number of trapped at more than 400.
It was not immediately clear if the fire was isolated.
“Fresh air, oxygen is being pumped into the mine. This was the most important thing for our workers down there,“ Energy Minister Taner Yildiz told reporters on his way to the airport to depart to Manisa.
Prime minister Tayyip Erdogan cancelled a day trip to Albania originally scheduled for Wednesday and instead was going to head to the disaster site, sources in his office said.
Turkey‘s worst mining accident took place in 1992, when a gas explosion killed 263 workers in Black Sea province of Zonguldak. The country has poor health and safety record in mining, particularly coal.
In May 2010, a gas explosion killed 30 miners again in Zonguldak province.
Reuters