NZ leader hopeful miners alive

John Key

John Key: “We are going to do everything we possibly can to get the men out alive”

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There is “every chance” the 29 men missing after Friday’s coal mine explosion in New Zealand are still alive, says Prime Minister John Key.

There has been no contact with the men since the blast at the Pike River mine near Greymouth on the South Island.

Families are still waiting for the rescue to begin, but the presence of toxic gases are making it too dangerous to enter the mine.

Meanwhile, drilling has started on a 15cm (six inch) wide ventilation shaft.

Rescuers hope to send a camera down once the hole is finished to see if the men are nearby. They also hope to test gas levels.

Mr Key said he had been advised the miners – who include 24 New Zealanders, two Australians, two Britons and a South African – may have found refuge in a ventilated spot and could still be rescued.

“The advice I have is that there is oxygen in the mine and there is every chance that those miners have managed to get to a pocket of that oxygen flow and therefore that they are alive,” Key told Sky News.

Officials have released names of those missing. The youngest of the miners, 17-year-old Joseph Dunbar, was reportedly on his first underground shift at the mine when the blast occurred. The oldest is Keith Valli, aged 62.

Grey District mayor Tony Kokshoorn told Reuters that a robot was also being prepared, which will be sent into the mine later to check if there is a clear path for rescuers.

Tearful families members were taken on a tour of the site of the Pike River coal mine on Sunday, in an effort to help them understand the dangers keeping rescuers at bay and to show them the rescue drills that are under way in preparation for an eventual operation.

A woman weeps amid family and friends of the 29 coal miners who are trapped underground after an explosion near Greymouth in New Zealand, 21 November 21 2010 Families were taken to the site on Sunday to see rescue preparations

“There was a lot of emotion on the site… there were some very poignant things up there for them, cars still parked and other things, and they were very emotional,” said Pike River chief executive Peter Whittall, according to AFP news agency.

He said that – 48 hours after the men were trapped – the families were “starting to be very concerned and want as much information as they can”.

Laurie Drew, whose 21-year-old son Zen is among those trapped, told New Zealand’s TV3 network that seeing a board with the men’s name tags missing was “hard”.

There were packed Sunday services at churches close to the mine as locals prayed together for the men to be found alive.

Tests at the mine show there are still a dangerous level of poisonous or potentially explosive gases in the mine, including carbon monoxide and methane, which rescue officials say make it unsafe for crews underground.

Map showing Pike River mine in New Zealand
Employs some 150 peopleOperational since 2008Accesses Brunner and Paparoa coal seams via 2.3km tunnel under mountains5.5m-wide, 4.5m-high tunnel bisects Hawera fault, through which methane gas is known to leakBlast is believed to have happened at 1530 (0230 GMT) on Friday

But Superintendent Gary Knowles, the head of the rescue effort at the Pike River coal mine said he remained positive about finding them alive.

Supt Knowles said there was no “quick fix”, but that rescue workers were doing all they could to find those missing.

Mr Knowles denied suggestions rescue teams were showing a lack of urgency because they believed the chances of finding the miners alive were low.

“I find that really repugnant,” he told a news conference on Sunday.

“We’re talking about people’s lives here… My decision is made based on safety and what experts are saying.”

The authorities are facing increasing pressure to clear the way for rescue teams to enter the mine, our correspondent says.

But they have repeatedly stressed the need to wait until it is safe – their great fear is that searching the mine could spark a second explosion, he says.

Each miner carried 30 minutes of oxygen, enough to reach oxygen stores in the mine that would allow them to survive for several days.

Fresh air is also being pumped into the mine through a shaft.

The men would have been carrying flasks of water, reports say, but there is no food underground.

The explosion at the mine, near the coastal town of Greymouth, is thought to have happened at around 1530 (0230 GMT) on Friday.

Miner Russell Smith

Russell Smith told Zealand’s TV3 network how he survived the blast – courtesy 3news.co.nz

Two workers who walked out of the mine have been treated in hospital for moderate injuries but have since been discharged.

One of them, coal cutter Russell Smith, told New Zealand’s TV3 network he had been late for work and so was not as far into the mine when the explosion hit.

Nevertheless, he said he had been knocked unconscious by the strength of the blast.

He said he saw a flash and then felt a series of shockwaves come down the mine.

“My hat was … torn off me,” he told TV3. “I remember struggling for breath.”

He said he had been very lucky.

“I could have been blown to bits,” he said.

He was found about 15m away from his vehicle and together with Daniel Rockhouse eventually found his way out of the mine.

Cross-section of the Pike River mine

This article is from the BBC News website. © British Broadcasting Corporation, The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.

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