用户名/邮箱
登录密码
验证码
看不清?换一张
您好,欢迎访问! [ 登录 | 注册 ]
您的位置:首页 - 最新资讯
Two more trapped miners safe after rescue, four more on long trek out of mine near Sudbury
2021-09-29 00:00:00.0     环球邮报-加拿大     原网页

       Open this photo in gallery

       The Totten Mine near Sudbury, Ont., on Sept. 27.

       Gino Donato/The Canadian Press

       Two more miners have emerged safe after being trapped underground in northern Ontario for two days.

       Vale (VAH’-lay), which owns the Totten Mine, says 35 of 39 miners have now reached the surface after a lengthy climb up a series of ladders.

       The company says a team of 58 responders are part of the rescue operation.

       Vale, the company that owns the mine, said it expects everyone to emerge Tuesday.

       Henry Bertrand, one of the first miners to reach the surface, told local reporters early Tuesday that he had been with a small group working about 650 metres underground. It took him a little more than two hours to make the climb out.

       “I’m happy to be out, for sure,” he said, explaining that he’d had to climb two sets of ladders, rest on a landing and then continue up. “It’s a trek. It’s hard on the arms.”

       There was a larger group of miners about 960 metres below the surface, Bertrand said.

       “A few gentlemen down there have health issues and stuff, so they’ll need assistance to come up,” he said.

       Bertrand added, however, that he hadn’t been too worried and took his time climbing out.

       “It wasn’t a cave-in or anything like that, no one was in harm’s way,” he said, noting that workers had been able to phone loved ones and were sent sandwiches and other snacks to eat.

       Story continues below advertisement

       “We stayed positive and cracked jokes and stuff like that.”

       The employees were trapped in the mine on Sunday when a scoop bucket being sent underground detached and blocked the mine shaft, Vale said.

       As a result, it said the “conveyance system” for taking workers to and from the surface became unavailable.

       The union, which represents 30 of the 39 staff members who were trapped in the mine, said a team of doctors is checking on the workers.

       “No one has been physically injured in the incident or in the evacuation,” the union said in a statement.

       Vale said the trapped miners have been staying in underground “refuge stations,” some 900 to 1,200 metres below the surface, as part of the company’s standard procedures.

       The workers began making their way out Monday night through what the company called a “a secondary egress ladder system.”

       “We thank the impacted employees for their patience and perseverance and the mine rescue teams for their tireless dedication and support,” said Gord Gilpin, head of mining for Vale’s Ontario operations. “This has been an incredible team effort.”

       The company said the trapped miners had access to food, water and medicine.

       “When an incident like this unfortunately happens, everyone comes together,” said Nick Larochelle, president of USW Local 6500.

       “The miners support each other, the highly trained mine rescue teams come together and the whole community waits patiently praying for the safe return of every one of the 39 miners to surface.”

       Totten Mine opened in 2014, in Worthington, Ont., and produces copper, nickel and precious metals. It employs about 200 people.

       The province’s Ministry of Labour, Training and Skills Development said an inspection team will investigate the incident once the rescue operation is finished.

       Your time is valuable. Have the Top Business Headlines newsletter conveniently delivered to your inbox in the morning or evening. Sign up today.

       


标签:综合
关键词: climb     surface     trapped     more miners     Bertrand     Totten     workers     rescue    
滚动新闻