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‘They were all young’: Turkish village mourns miners killed in blast

Family members grieve over a coffin of one of three miners killed in a near by mine blast, during their funeral in the village of Ahatlar near Amasra, in the Black Sea province of Bartın on October 16, 2022. - Three out of 41 miners who were killed in the coal mine explosion in the town of Amasra on October 14, 2022, were from the village of Ahatlar. Rescuers on October 15, 2022 searched for the last miner missing at the coal mine in northern Turkey, where a methane blast on October 14, killed at least 41 people in one of the country's worst industrial accidents in years. (Photo by Yasin AKGUL / AFP)

Sitting on the stairs of his house overlooking the Black Sea, the father of a dead miner accepts condolences from relatives and neighbors. His scarred Turkish village lost three of its young men in this Friday’s mining disaster.

Three out of 41 miners killed in the coal mine explosion in the town of Amasra on Friday were from Ahatlar, a village on its outskirts, where funeral services were held on Sunday.

“My son is gone. I am falling apart, this is ruining me,” said grieving Kemal Yıldırım, father of Şaban, who was in his early 20s when he died.

“Friends gave me the sad news. We hurried to the pit on Friday. He was one of the last remaining ones to be pulled out at 7 am the next day,” he said.

The young miner’s pregnant wife is expecting twins. He was employed by the state-owned Turkish Hard Coal Enterprises’ mine in 2019 after graduating from university.

A relative hung flags outside the house. Shoes piled up on the doormat, and women covering their heads with scarves packed into a room, while men waited under a blue canvas outside, protected from the rain.

Hundreds of people from neighboring villages also gathered outside the house as an imam led the funeral service. Şaban’s wife hugged the coffin, which was covered with a Turkish flag.

“Take me, not him,” said the grieving father, so moved he could barely breathe.

Officials said 28 miners were wounded and 58 survived following the blast, which according to preliminary findings was caused by firedamp — a term referring to a build-up of methane gas.

‘Gas smell’

Şaban had told his wife “the mine had been smelling of gas inside for 10 days,” his father said. “He was going to take an annual vacation.”

“His dream was to raise his children. I am devastated,” he said.

The sister of another miner killed in the explosion said he too had smelt gas.

Her brief exchange with President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan on Saturday was caught by cameras.

Erdoğan attended funerals in nearby villages after arriving at the mine together with ministers and rescuers.

In the village of Makaracı, which lost four men, a tearful sister told Erdoğan: “President, my brother knew, he said there was a gas leak 10, 15 days ago. He said ‘they will explode us soon’. How come it’s negligence? He said ‘they will explode us here’… He knew it.”

Erdoğan, after a moment of silence, was heard answering: “Sorry for your loss, may Allah give patience.”

‘Mine martyrs’

The government has described the dead as “mine martyrs.”

Mevlut Özgün, a relative of the Yıldırım family, said the three from Ahatlar were “all young sons.”

“They had been miners for only three or four years,” he told AFP outside the house.

“It’s dangerous, causes diseases in the future but what could have they done? That was how they (made) their living.”

Erdoğan sparked controversy on Saturday when he linked the killings to destiny.

“We are people who believe in the plan of destiny,” he told reporters, surrounded by rescue workers. Such accidents “will always be, we need to know that too.”

His comments sparked anger among his opponents, and triggered protests in İstanbul with a few demonstrators saying “it was not an accident but a massacre.”

Opposition leader Kemal Kılıçdaroğlu, who also attended funerals in Amasra, said the state was obliged to ensure the safety of its people.

“In which century we are living? Why (do) the mine accidents happen only in Turkey?” he said.

Emin Koramaz, who leads the Union of Chambers of Turkish Engineers and Architects, said on Twitter: “If you send miners hundreds of meters underground without taking the necessary precautions, without inspection and without creating safe conditions, you cannot call it an accident.”

© Agence France-Presse

 

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