13 Dead After Fire in Czech Mine
Thirteen miners died and 10 were injured after a fire caused by burning methane erupted in a black coal mine in the east of the Czech Republic, a spokesman said Friday, reported AFP
"In total we have 13 dead miners, 11 Polish and two Czech," Ivo Celechovsky, spokesman for the OKD mining company, told AFP.
The accident occurred at a depth of 880 metres (yards) at the CSM mine in the city of Karvina, about 300 kilometres (200 miles) east of Prague, on Thursday afternoon.
Rescuers found five dead miners on Thursday and reported eight missing. All of them were also found dead.
Celechovsky said the fire was still burning, with rescuers building barriers to stop it from spreading.
He added they would work there at least until Sunday.
Nada Chattova, a spokeswoman for the hospital in the nearby city of Ostrava, said two men had been treated at its burn centre.
"One was brought in by a helicopter, he is still in a critical condition. The other one is in a stable condition and his life is not in danger," she told AFP.
One miner with a lighter injury was taken to a hospital in Karvina and seven were treated on the spot, also with lighter injuries, Czech media said.
"The blast at the CSM mine is a huge tragedy," tweeted Czech Prime Minister Andrej Babis, who will travel to the site on Friday morning along with his Polish counterpart Mateusz Morawiecki.
The prime ministers talked on the phone after the accident, Morawiecki said in a tweet, adding that Polish rescuers had also been sent to the mine.
Celechovsky said on Thursday the dead Polish miners were from the Poland-based Alpex mining company.
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