SOMA,
#Turkey — As grieving families prepared to bury more of the dead from
Turkey’s worst #mine disaster, the country’s energy minister said on
Friday that up to 18 people were still missing and the death toll could
exceed 300.
The assessment was lower than other accounts suggesting that scores of miners were still unaccounted for.
An
explosion at a coal mine on Tuesday near this town in western Turkey
ignited a blaze producing noxious fumes that choked hundreds of miners
to death as they were changing shifts. By Friday, the death toll stood
at 284, but the energy minister, Taner Yildiz, said in televised remarks
to reporters that the final count was unlikely to be more than 302.
“A
maximum number of 18 workers are inside,” Mr. Yildiz said, according to
news reports. “We expect the toll at around 301 or 302.”
Mr. Yildiz has been saying for several days that there is little hope of finding more survivors.
The
disaster rekindled concerns about safety standards and work conditions
at Turkey’s mines, and there have been protests in Istanbul, Ankara,
Izmir and other cities, with demonstrators accusing Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan and his government of indifference.
That
perception deepened on Thursday when Turkish newspapers published
photographs of a prime ministerial aide kicking a protester who was
being held down by police during a visit to the mine on Wednesday by Mr.
Erdogan, who was heckled.
On
Friday, Mr. Yildiz said he hoped a reduction in the levels of toxic
fumes in the mine would enable rescuers to enter its galleries to
retrieve the missing miners.
Mourners
planned more funerals Friday after mass burials on Thursday when, with
passport-size photographs of their loved ones fastened to their chests,
relatives shuffled toward the cemetery in a mourning ritual repeated for
hours. At least 30 miners were buried as gravediggers toiled to make
room for the bodies of the men still trapped underground.
Mr.
Yildiz’s estimate of 18 miners still missing was lower than had been
expected on Thursday when at least 140 miners were said to be trapped in
chambers deep underground, with little hope of survival.
For
the first time since the disaster, the company operating the mine
offered its own comment on the deaths, saying on Friday that there was
no negligence on its part and that it still did not know the exact cause
of the accident, Reuters reported.
“We
still do not know how the accident happened. There is no negligence of
ours in this incident. We all worked heart and soul,” Akin Celik, the
plant manager of the mine, run by Soma Holding, was quoted as saying.
Mr. Yildiz, the energy minister, had said earlier that anyone found to have been negligent would be punished.
Source: The New York Times
Source: The New York Times
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