The Raspadskaya mine explosion was a mine explosion in the Raspadskaya mine, located near Mezhdurechensk in Kemerovo Oblast, Russia, which occurred on 8 May 2010. It was believed to have been caused by a buildup of methane. The initial explosion was followed by a second approximately four hours later which collapsed the mine's ventilation shaft and trapped several rescue workers. By 18 May 2010, 66[1] people were confirmed to have died with at least 99 others injured and as many as a further 24 unaccounted for.
History
editThe mine, owned by Russian company Raspadskaya, is the largest underground coal mine in Russia,[2] producing 10% of the country's coking coal.[citation needed] It has a history of accidents and safety problems. In March 2001, another methane explosion killed four miners and injured six. The mine was shut down for two weeks in 2008 due to safety violations and a worker was killed after part of the mine collapsed in January 2010.[citation needed]
Incident
editThe first blast occurred at 20:55 Moscow Summer Time (16:55 UTC) with the second at 01:00 MST (21:00 UTC).[citation needed] The explosions were confirmed by investigators to have been caused by methane gas.[3] A secondary explosion was reported approximately four hours later, with 20 rescue workers now among those missing.[3] The second explosion caused a collapse of the mine's ventilation shaft, drastically reducing the flow of fresh air into the mine.[citation needed]
Rescue efforts were suspended after the second blast.[4] By 18 May 2010, 66 people were confirmed to have died, at least 99 injured and 24 remained trapped underground.[5] Rescue work resumed late on May 9 after methane levels had dropped below safety limits and, at the peak of the operation, 560 people were involved with aid being sent from other parts of Russia.[citation needed]
Aftermath
editAman Tuleyev, governor of Kemerovo Oblast, has taken charge of the rescue operation.[3] The mine was evacuated after the first explosion and 282 people escaped to the surface.[citation needed] The Russian Energy Ministry has set up a task force to deal with the aftermath of the incident while President Dmitry Medvedev ordered a report from his emergencies minister and a junior energy minister, Vladimir Azbukin visited the scene.[citation needed] Medvedev ordered Prime Minister Vladimir Putin to head a government commission dealing with the aftermath of the incident.[citation needed]
The mine company agreed to pay 1 million Russian rubles in compensation (approximately US$ 33,000) to the families of the dead with additional assistance from the state. A government spokesman released a statement in which he said "families of the deceased, children of miners will get all the necessary assistance. The government has already discussed the issue with the mine's owners".[citation needed]
The event occurred the day before Victory Day and officials in the nearby town of Mezhdurechensk, where many of the mine's employees live, cancelled planned celebrations for the following day.[citation needed]
A criminal investigation was launched into the incident by Russian authorities and post-mortem examinations were carried out on the bodies of the miners to establish a precise cause of death.[citation needed]
The tragedy provoked civil unrest in nearby Mezhdurechensk. Coal miners rallied and occasionally clashed with police, 28 were arrested.[6] Governor Tuleyev met with the protesters and agreed with some of their demands.[7]
The appeal of "The Union of Kuznetsk Basin Residents"
editOn 16 May a new movement "The Union of Kuznetsk Basin Residents" issued an appeal to the President, the people of Russia and to those who live in the region. The authors made five demands: release the detained in the town of Mezhdurechensk, increase miners' minimum salaries threefold, stop persecution of the independent trade union, withdraw the police forces brought from other regions, and introduce monthly meetings of the town administration with the residents. The authors said that they would wait for the reply from the President until 21 May. Then, if their demands were not satisfied, they promised to start political actions.
The appeal appeared in blogs, including the specially created blog Golos Kuzbassa (lit. Voice of Kuzbass) and community Mezhdurechensk (later the community moderators deleted the text). It was also published by some mass media.
The State Duma deputy from the communists Nina Ostanina supported this appeal. According to her, if the region administration does not heed the demands of citizens, it may lead to events similar to those in Kyrgyzstan.[8] The appeal was also supported by the Solidarnost movement[9] and the All-Russian Strike Committee.[10]
See also
edit- Vorkuta mine disaster—25-29 February 2016, methane explosion, 36 killed
- Yubileynaya mine—24 May 2007, methane explosion, 39 killed
- Ulyanovskaya Mine disaster—19 March 2007, methane explosion, at least 108 killed
References
edit- ^ Сенатор нашел в волнениях в Междуреченске "оранжевый след" 18 May 2010. Lenta.ru Accessed 26 June 2010.
- ^ "Coal mine blasts kill 12 and trap 83". Reuters via The Independent. London: Independent News and Media. 10 May 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
- ^ a b c "Blast at Russian mine in western Siberia kills eight". BBC News. BBC. 8 May 2010. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
- ^ "West Siberian mine hit by two blasts, casualty reports vary". RIA Novosti. 9 May 2010. Archived from the original on 16 July 2011. Retrieved 9 May 2010.
- ^ "Toll rises to 30 as rescue continues at Russian mine". BBC News. BBC. 10 May 2010. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
- ^ Al Jazeera: Russians arrested in mine protest
- ^ ITAR-TASS: Kemerovo reg governor blames coalmine owners for tragedy[permanent dead link ]
- ^ "Эхо Москвы :: Новости / В Интернете появилось открытое обращение к Дмитрию Медведеву, гражданам России и жителям Кемеровской области". Эхо Москвы.
- ^ В поддержку шахтеров Кузбасса Archived 2010-05-23 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Оргкомитет по формированию Всероссийского забастовочного комитета призывает к солидарным действиям в поддержку шахтеров Кузбасса". 16 May 2010.