A coal mine explosion in northern Mexico has killed five workers, and another another nine are trapped and feared dead.
As the Associated Press reports, Mexican authorities had hoped to fly in Chilean experts who worked on the rescue of 33 trapped miners last year. But after rescuers discovered the first five bodies and saw the scope of the damage to the mine, hopes dimmed about the likelihood of finding any survivors.
“The outlook is very bad,” said Labor Secretary Javier Lozano, who flew to the mine site in San Juan de Sabinas, which is 85 miles southwest of Eagle Pass, Texas.
Tuesday’s mine explosion was powerful enough that a 15-year-old boy working on a conveyer belt on the surface was badly injured. The AP reported that the teenager needed to have an arm amputated. Federal authorities said that the boy’s employment at the mine appeared to violate the nation’s labor laws.
Mexico’s national miners union criticized “the totally unsafe conditions in which coal mines in Mexico, and especially in this region known as the coal belt, operate.”
A blast in the same northern state of Coahuila killed 65 miners in 2006. Federal authorities have launched an investigation into the most recent explosion, which is believed to have been caused by a build-up of methane gas, as was the case in the 2006 disaster.
Experts say that the primitive design of the San Juan de Sabinas facility — a small, vertical-shaft mine — is extremely hazardous, yet such mines abound in the region.
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