A methane gas explosion at a mine in eastern Ukraine
has left six people dead - the second major accident at a Ukrainian pit
in two weeks.
Fourteen others were injured in the blast at the Yubileinaya mine
in Dnipropetrovsk region - some seriously, officials said.
The explosion comes just two weeks after a fire at another mine in the
east of the country left 35 miners dead.
Poor working conditions and lack of capital investment are blamed for
the frequent accidents at the country's mines.
Hundreds of miners protested in the capital Kiev last week about poor
safety and working conditions in the ageing and deep coal pits.
Poor record
"Six were killed, four of those were crushed to death and two died
from carbon monoxide poisoning. Fourteen have various degrees of burns
and four of them are in a serious condition. Everyone has been brought
up now", a spokesman at the Emergencies Ministry in Ukraine told Reuters
news agency.
He said a special commission would be set up to to investigate the
blast, which left dozens trapped.
Ukraine's pits are
the world's most dangerous, the World Bank says
|
Hundreds of thousands of miners work in about 200 pits in Ukraine concentrated
mostly in the eastern Donbass area.
Last year, more than 300 people died in mining accidents in the country.
The number of miners killed in industrial accidents in the past 10
years is put at more than 3,700.
On 7 July, 35 miners died and 12 others were injured in a fire at
the Ukraina pit in Ukrainsk.
Three senior managers at the mine were arrested over the incident,
accused of violating safety rules.