Families hope for miracle in Mexican mine disaster
By Frank Jack Daniel and Monica Medel
SAN JUAN DE SABINAS, Mexico (Reuters) – A six-day search
for 65 workers trapped in a Mexican coal mine has been
suspended but dozens of relatives refused to leave the mine
entrance on Saturday, hoping for a miracle.
Officials suspended the search for two or three days on
Friday night because high levels of methane gas threatened to
spark a new explosion like the one that ripped through the mine
last Sunday morning.
Rescuers say at least half of the men are almost certainly
dead because there is not enough oxygen to sustain life in the
sections of the mine they were working in at the time of the
explosion.
Many of the hundreds of relatives who had stayed at the
mine entrance have gone home. But about 40 were still there on
Saturday, refusing to give up hope.
“The probabilities are fading but, until they come out with
the people, you keep the hope that they find them alive,” said
Agustin Botello, 30, whose father was among those in the
deepest section of the mine at the time of the explosion.
Since then, there has been no contact with any of the 65
missing men and their chances of survival slip with every hour
that passes. Their only chance would now be if they were close
to a large pocket of clean air or if ventilator shafts were
pushing enough clean air into their area of the mine.
“The main thing is to have faith and hope. But with the
conditions down there, you begin to doubt,” said Jorge Uribe,
whose uncle is among the trapped men.
“It can’t continue like this. They are not animals to be
left down there.”
Relatives exploded in anger and roughed up Labor Minister
Francisco Salazar after they were told the search was being
postponed on Friday. Some complain rescuers were not given
sophisticated heat-seeking equipment to locate the miners.
Mine experts drilled into the Pasta de Conchos mine in the
northern state of Coahuila from the surface on Saturday in an
attempt to suck out the methane gas and make it safe for rescue
efforts to continue.
Five machines have been working nonstop since Friday night
to check the air quality and get the gas out, a spokesman for
mine owner Grupo Mexico said on Saturday.
The company has said it will pay compensation of about
$70,000 for each of the men killed.
Union leaders say Grupo Mexico ignored safety concerns but
the company has denied negligence and said a recent government
check on conditions at the mine concluded it was safe.
Salazar said an investigation was already under way and
that Grupo Mexico would face sanctions if it was found
responsible for the disaster.
