Officials Say 21 Workers Killed at Coal Mine in Colombia

Officials Say 21 Workers Killed at Coal Mine in Colombia
Neighbors and relatives wait for news of miners at a coal mine affected by an explosion in Sutatausa in the Cundinamarca Province of Colombia, on March 15, 2023. (Ivan Valencia/AP Photo)
The Associated Press
3/16/2023
Updated:
3/16/2023

BOGOTA, Colombia—Rescue operations at a coal mine in central Colombia that collapsed earlier this week ended Thursday and officials said the accident had left 21 workers dead.

The mine near the town of Sutatausa collapsed late Tuesday following an explosion that blocked several of its entrances. Rescue teams worked nonstop for more than 30 hours to find survivors and retrieve bodies.

Friends and relatives of miners embrace at the entrance of a coal mine affected by an explosion that according to authorities killed at least 11 people in Sutatausa, in the Cundinamarca Province of Colombia, on March 15, 2023. (Ivan Valencia/AP Photo)
Friends and relatives of miners embrace at the entrance of a coal mine affected by an explosion that according to authorities killed at least 11 people in Sutatausa, in the Cundinamarca Province of Colombia, on March 15, 2023. (Ivan Valencia/AP Photo)

Nicolás García, the governor of Cundinamarca Province, said nine workers survived the accident and had been released from hospital, while the relatives of miners who were killed were receiving psychological support. Officials said all of the workers who were at the mine at the time of the accident had been accounted for.

Mining accidents are common in Colombia, particularly in coal and gold mines. Last year 117 accidents were registered at mines throughout the country by the National Mining Agency, which says that 146 workers were killed in those incidents.