Only one US miner survived
TALLMAWSVILLE, West Virginia Wednesday (AFP) Only one of the 13 US
coal miners trapped for 41 hours underground has survived, the company
which owns the mine said Wednesday, hours after it was announced that 12
men had survived.
"The initial report from the rescue teams from the command center
indicated multiple survivors, but that information proved to be a
miscommunication," International Coal Group (ICG) president and chief
executive Ben Hatfield told reporters.
"The only confirmed survivor is Randall McCloy, who has now been
rushed to a local hospital in serious condition. The 11 remaining miners
in the barricade structure were determined by the medical technicians on
the rescue team to have already deceased," Hatfield said.
Late Tuesday rescue teams recovered the body of a thirteenth miner,
who was not a member of the work team that was found later in the
tunnel.
They were trapped early Monday by an explosion that ripped through
the Sago mine as they were resuming work following the Christmas and New
Year holidays.
Shortly before midnight (0500 GMT Wednesday), bells pealed and cheers
were heard at the Sago Baptist Church, as West Virginia Governor Joe
Manchin announced: "They told us they have 12 alive."
An ambulance was seen leaving the mine with an injured miner on
board, whom Hatfield later identified as the sole survivor of the
tragedy. Local hospital officials said the 26-year-old miner was in
critical condition and would be transferred to a larger medical center
at Morgantown.
At around 3:00 am, a different scene evolved at the church as people
began leaving in a state of shock and in tears after mining officials
inside had confirmed the grim news that only one of the miners had
survived.
Asked how such a serious mistake was made, Hatfield said ICG had
taken every precaution to make sure its information was correct but that
"bad information" from the rescue team was inadvertently relayed to the
outside. |