Abbottabad mine collapse: 36 hours later, 4 bodies recovered

The mine, built illegally, was being excavated by untrained workers; case registered against owners.


Web Desk/iftikhar Firdous January 26, 2012

ABBOTTABAD/ PESHAWAR: Bereaved villagers and overworked rescuers toiled for hours on Thursday managed to dig out four bodies of eleven trapped miners who are believed to have died in Wednesday’s phosphate mine collapse.

Express News reported late on Thursday night that the bodies of three cousins Nazir Shah, Saeed Shah, Abbas Shah along with fellow labourer Abdul Razzak Abbasi was recovered from the collapsed mine. They were all recovered from the same spot. Rescue workers at the scene said that they expect to recover more bodies from the same spot.

The accident occurred in a remote Abbottabad village, Batkinala when 11 mine workers, including two owners, were buried alive as a heavy mass of phosphate mine fell on them. They were reportedly having lunch at the mouth of the mine, sources said.

According to locals, the mine was being quarried by workers without any proper training. The mine, they said, was developed by the workers on their own and without a permit from the provincial mineral department.

Attempts to launch a rescue operation were made as soon as villagers contacted police and district administration officials, but the mine is located at a steep point which was inaccessible by land.

“The chill and rainy weather also hampered the operation,” DCO Abbottabad Imtiaz Hussain Shah said. “Civil defence workers and officials of Rescue 1122 were called in but since they are carrying out the operation without any machinery, a breakthrough in recovering the bodies can only be expected by midnight.”

Shah said that machinery has been moved to the site but it cannot be transported to where the accident occurred, because the area is steep. However, a police source said that the operation could take up to two days.

Meanwhile, police have registered a criminal case against mine owners Muhammad Riaz and Younas Shah. The case, launched under Section 322 of the Pakistan Penal Code, has been lodged on a complaint of Muhammad Riaz, an assistant director at the Hazara division’s mines department.

In his report to the director-general of the Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Mines Department, Riaz said that excavation was being done unscientifically due to which the mine developed a landslide which was hovering over the mouth of the mine. He blamed the owners for illegal quarrying of phosphate and held them responsible for the deaths of 11 people.

One of the nominated accused, Younas Shah, is among the trapped miners who are feared dead.

Meanwhile, in a belated response to the tragedy, Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa Information Minister Mian Iftikhar Hussain has put the death toll at 14 and confirmed that the mines were illegal.

“The mines were illegal but at this point, we should be searching for survivors. So far, no bodies have been found,” Hussain told The Express Tribune.

Condoling with the affected families, he said that officials from Mardan and Rawalpindi had reached the area and heavy machinery was also arranged with help from Pakistan Army.

COMMENTS (3)

ibrar | 12 years ago | Reply

it is the responsibility of gov to provide some safty for the mining worker and it is the responsibility of mine manager to give brief description before the starting of works .i am so sade when i listen about this accident .i request to all mining engineesr should guide the worker about safty..........

Furqan H. | 12 years ago | Reply Education and advertisement of the need of right technical knowledge for dangerous jobs is urgently required by the respective government authority before more accidents occur.
VIEW MORE COMMENTS
Replying to X

Comments are moderated and generally will be posted if they are on-topic and not abusive.

For more information, please see our Comments FAQ