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WSWS : News
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Polish mining disaster claims 23 lives
By Cezar Komorovsky
25 November 2006
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In the worst mining disaster in modern Polish history, 23 miners
lost their lives at Halemba, a colliery in the town of Ruda Slaska
in the southern industrial province of Silesia.
A methane explosion at a depth of 1,030 meters caused the November
21 tragedy. The miners were attempting to retrieve 17 million
($US22 million) worth of equipment from a tunnel when a blast
caused the shaft to collapse. The tunnel was supposed to have
been closed in March due to dangerously high methane concentrations,
but was kept active because of the value of the equipment left
behind.
The pit was the site of a near-fatal accident earlier this
year. In February, a methane gas explosion led to one miner being
trapped under rubble for 111 hours. He was eventually pulled out
alive.
According to a Polish Coal Company (PCC) spokesman, the state-owned
enterprise that owns the mine, the miners were killed instantly
in the latest explosion. Experts asserted that the blast would
have produced temperatures of up to 1,800 degrees Celsius.
Due to the depth and dangerousness of the corridor in which
the miners were working, the chances of any of them surviving
were seen as extremely small. This was confirmed when the body
of the last of the miners was found in the early hours of November
23. The youngest of the victims was 21, the oldest, 59. Identification
has proven difficult, as their personal belongings were blown
away and ID tags misplaced.
Rescue teams were immediately brought to the scene of the accident,
but were compelled to evacuate due to the intense heat and hazardous
methane accumulation inside the mine. Rescuers were working
in extremely difficult conditions, Zygmunt Goldstein, a
primary advisor to a mine rescue center based in the nearby town
of Bytom, told Associated Press (AP). We had methane, we
had poisonous gases, high temperatures, high humidity, water threats,
structural changes after the explosion.
The families and loved ones of the miners were at the scene
throughout the ordeal. I came to support my mother,
Mariola Pietkiewicz told AP, weeping as she explained that her
brother was one of the victims. Im the only one left
for her.
Fellow miners from the Halemba colliery were also on hand to
hear the devastating news. I have been working in the mine
for 26 years, Dariusz Jozwiak told Radio Polonia.
I also had some close calls. But I cant talk about
this disaster now. We have to go below because [we] have families
to support.
Polish prime minister Jaroslaw Kaczynski flew to the area and
proceeded to downplay any corporate responsibility for the disaster.
We have to bear in mind that it remains highly probable
[that] the developments had been triggered by natural forces,
he told Radio Polonia, after declaring three national days
of mourning.
Labor unions criticized Kaczynskis remarks. They complained
that a lack of investment and massive layoffs in recent years
have resulted in falling safety standards in Polands mines.
Dominik Kolorz from the Solidarity trade union said, For
the past six or seven years weve been talking to people
in the ministry of labour and theyve been telling us that
safety conditions in the mines are terrible.... There maybe more
tragedies like this. The frequency of accidents has increased
a lot.
At least 160 people have died in coal mining accidents in the
past three decades in Polands primary coal-producing region,
southern industrial Silesia. More than 80 have perished in the
past three years.
In 1974, 34 were killed in a coal dust explosion at the Silesia
coal mine in Czechowice-Dziedzice. Five years later, another 34
perished in a coal dust explosion at the Dymitrow mine in nearby
Bytom.
The rate of mining deaths began to increase in Poland after
the crisis of Stalinism in the 1980s.
A coal dust explosion at the Myslowice mine in Myslowice caused
the deaths of 19 miners in 1987, while a further 19 were killed
in 1990 due to a methane gas explosion at the Halemba mine, the
scene of the latest tragedy. This mine was again the site of a
fatal accident in 1991, when five miners were killed in a cave-in.
In 1998, six miners with damaged oxygen masks asphyxiated after
being sent into a shuttered shaft in violation of security regulations
at the Niwka-Modrzejow mine in the Silesian town of Sosnowiec.
In 2002, ten miners perished in a coal dust explosion in the Jas-Mos
mine in Jastrzebie Zdroj. On July 27, 2006, the town of Ruda Slaska
again saw fatalities, with four miners killed after a cave-in
at its Pokoj colliery.
Prior to 1989, miners represented a relatively privileged layer
of workers during the rule of the Stalinist bureaucracy, with
higher wages and better social benefits than other sections of
the workforce. The collapse of the Stalinist bureaucracy in 1989-90
brought with it a rapid decline in the status of Polish miners.
During and after 1989, state funding for mines was dramatically
reduced in order to open up Polands economy
to international investment capital, which was wary of the previous
high rates of taxation to support Polands mines and those
who worked in them. What remained of the state-owned Polish Coal
Company (PCC) became a shadow of its former self, as safety regulations,
wages, and jobs themselves were compromised for the sake of the
profit interests of the multinational corporations and banks.
Coal production in Poland has decreased by about 50 percent
since the start of the 1990s, but with current production at around
100 million metric tons a year, Poland remains the European Unions
biggest producer. Along with the cuts in production, 250,000 jobs
have been axed, wages cut and working conditions drastically worsened.
On June 5, 2006 the intensified exploitation in the Polish
mining industry provoked a two-hour stoppage by more than 70,000
miners. They opposed the plans of Economy Minister Pawel Poncyliusz
to pay lower bonuses, even though the PCCs profits, at approximately
250 million ($US323.6 million) in 2005, were higher than
the year before.
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