Rescuers pulled more dead and injured from a coal
mine in western Turkey on Wednesday more than 12 hours after an explosion,
bringing the death toll to 201 in the nation’s worst mining disaster for
decades.
Hundreds more were still believed to be trapped in
the mine in Soma, around 120 km (75 miles) northeast of the Aegean coastal city
of Izmir. The explosion, which triggered a fire, occurred shortly after 3 pm
(1200 GMT) on Tuesday.
“We are worried that this death toll will rise
… I have to say that our hopes are dimming in terms of the rescue
efforts,” Energy Minister Taner Yildiz told reporters at the scene.
Fellow miners said the fire was still burning
underground, hampering the operation. A pall of smoke hung above the area.
Rescue workers pumped oxygen into the mine to try
to keep those trapped by the blaze alive, as thousands of family members and
co-workers gathered outside the town’s hospital. Many of the dead had suffered
carbon monoxide poisoning, Yildiz said.
The energy minister had warned late on Tuesday that
787 workers had been in the mine at the time of the blast, believed to have
been caused by an electrical fault.
Some 80 people were pulled out wounded including
several rescuers, four of them critically injured.
The explosion took place during a change in shifts,
meaning there was uncertainty about the exact number of miners still trapped
inside, although Turkey’s disaster management agency (AFAD) put the figure at
more than 200 late on Tuesday.
A cold storage warehouse, usually used for food,
and freezer trucks served as makeshift morgues as hospital facilities
overflowed. Medical staff intermittently emerged from the hospital to read the
names of survivors being treated inside, with families and fellow workers clamouring
for information.
Teams of psychiatrists were being pulled together
to help counsel the families of victims. Paramilitary police guarded the
entrance to the mine to keep distressed relatives at a safe distance from the
rescue effort.
There were calls on social media for protests in
front of the Istanbul headquarters of Soma Komur Isletmeleri, the operator of
the mine. The company said in a brief statement late on Tuesday that there had
been “a grave accident” caused by an explosion in a substation but
gave few other details.
Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan cancelled a day trip
to Albania, scheduled for Wednesday, and would instead go to the site of the
disaster, sources in his office said.
The Labour Ministry said late on Tuesday its
officials had carried out regular inspections at the mine, most recently in
March this year, and that no irregularities had been detected.
Turkey’s worst mining accident was in 1992, when a
gas explosion killed 263 workers in the Black Sea province of Zonguldak. The country
has a poor health and safety record in mining, particularly coal.
In May 2010, another gas explosion killed 30
miners, again in Zonguldak province.