Eight bodies Recovered After Gold Mine Fire in South Africa
Rescue
workers at a South African gold mine announced that they have recovered eight
bodies after a fire and rock fall.
One
other miner remains missing at the Doornkop mine west of Johannesburg, the
government said.
Earlier,
eight miners were rescued unharmed in an underground refuge chamber and brought
to the surface, says mine owners, Harmony Gold.
The
fire started on Tuesday evening about 1,700m (5,600ft) below ground. The cause
of the blaze is unknown.
"The
situation is deeply regrettable," Mineral Resources Minister Susan
Shabangu said in a statement.
"We
must ensure that we do all we can to get to the bottom of what caused this
incident in order to prevent similar occurrences in future."
Eric
Gcilitshana of the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) said the bodies had been
discovered on Wednesday evening.
"This
is a very sad moment for us in the NUM. Our hearts go out to the families of
the deceased," he was quoted as saying in The Star newspaper.
Mine
officials said earlier that the rescuers had been struggling to access the
affected area because of smoke and falling rocks.
Although
the cause of the tragedy has not been established, the NUM has suggested that
an earth tremor caused a rock fall which triggered the fire.
Harmony
Gold has confirmed there was some seismic activity in the area.
The
NUM has called for an urgent investigation into the incident.
Correspondents
say it is the most serious accident in South Africa's mines since nine workers
were killed in a rock fall at a platinum mine in July 2009.
South
Africa has some of the world's deepest gold mines and safety is a major issue,
not least because thousands of illegal miners also operate in the same areas,
says the BBC's Andrew Harding in Johannesburg.
Mining
is a vital part of the South African economy.
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