Skip to content

Breaking News

  • TURKEY OUTRescue and mine workers try to free the 20...

    TURKEY OUTRescue and mine workers try to free the 20 miners trapped in a coal mine in southern Turkey on October 28, 2014 in Karaman. Some 20 miners were trapped in a coal mine in southern Turkey on October 28 after a portion of the mine collapsed due to a build-up of water, officials said. There were 40 miners underground at the time of the accident in the district of Ermenek in the southern province of Karaman, the regional governor Murat Koca told Turkish television.AFP PHOTO/IHLAS NEWS AGENCY -- TURKEY OUT --IHLAS NEWS AGENCY/AFP/Getty Images

  • TURKEY OUTRescue and mine workers try to free the 20...

    TURKEY OUTRescue and mine workers try to free the 20 miners trapped in a coal mine in southern Turkey on October 28, 2014 in Karaman. Some 20 miners were trapped in a coal mine in southern Turkey on October 28 after a portion of the mine collapsed due to a build-up of water, officials said. There were 40 miners underground at the time of the accident in the district of Ermenek in the southern province of Karaman, the regional governor Murat Koca told Turkish television. AFP PHOTO/IHLAS NEWS AGENCY -- TURKEY OUT --IHLAS NEWS AGENCY/AFP/Getty Images

of

Expand
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

ANKARA, Turkey — Surging water trapped at least 18 workers Tuesday in a coal mine in Turkey, officials and reports said — an event likely to raise even more concerns about the nation’s poor workplace safety standards.

Initial reports said flooding inside the Has Sekerler mine near the town of Ermenek in Karaman province caused a cave-in, but subsequent reports workers were trapped by the water. Turkey’s emergency management agency, AFAD, said a broken pipe in the mine caused the flooding but did not elaborate.

Gov. Murat Koca said about 20 other workers escaped or were rescued from the mine, some 500 kilometers (300 miles) south of Ankara, close to Turkey’s Mediterranean coast

Sahin Uyar, an official at the privately owned coal mine, told private NTV television that the miners were stuck more than 300 meters (330 yards) underground.

“At the moment, 18 of our colleagues are trapped. We are working to pump water out from three sections of the mine,” he told NTV, adding that rescue crews had made no contact with the miners.

Uyar said the trapped workers’ chances of survival were slim unless they had managed to reach a safety gallery.

Turkey’s ministers for energy and transportation immediately left Ankara, the capital, to oversee the rescue operation. AFAD said it had sent 225 people to join rescuers from neighboring mines and regions.

In May, a fire inside a coal mine in the western town of Soma killed 301 miners in Turkey’s worst mining disaster. The fire exposed poor safety standards and superficial government inspections in many of the country’s mines.

AP-WF-10-28-14 1613GMT