Iran blast kills more than 50 mine workers
A blast caused by a gas leak at a coal mine has killed at least 51 people, state media said Sunday, in one of Iran's deadliest work accidents in years.
"The number of dead workers increased to 51" in the explosion at the Tabas mine in eastern Iran, the official IRNA news agency reported, revising an earlier death toll of 30.
It said 20 more were injured.
The explosion occurred at around 9:00 pm (1730 GMT) on Saturday, when around 70 workers were present at the site in South Khorasan province, IRNA said.
IRNA said a methane leak led to the blast in two blocks of the mine, owned by private Iranian firm Madanjoo.
State TV broadcast footage of ambulances and helicopters arriving at Tabas.
Online footage carried by IRNA showed bodies of some of the victims, wearing their work clothes, being brought out of the mine.
South Khorasan governor Javad Ghenaat told state TV rescue teams were working to recover the remaining bodies.
Supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei expressed his condolences at the "sad accident" and also urged the authorities to do everything they could to save those trapped.
Iran's Red Crescent said search and rescue operations were underway in the mine, where some workers remained trapped.
IRNA reported that they were about 250 metres (820 feet) below the surface, cut off from rescuers by chambers that had filled with methane.
An apparent "gas condensation" in the mine is believed to have been the cause of the explosion, said Iranian Interior Minister Eskandar Momeni.
Momeni said at the site that rescue operations "could last until tomorrow", Monday.
Iran's President Masoud Pezeshkian, in remarks carried by state TV before he left for the UN General Assembly in New York, offered his condolences to the families of the victims and ordered an inquiry.
- Three days' mourning -
"Unfortunately, we learned that an accident occurred in one of the coal mines in Tabas and a number of our compatriots lost their lives. I offer my condolences to their respected families," Pezeshkian said.
His first vice president, Mohammad Reza Aref, spoke with cabinet members to ensure "emergency follow-up" and support for the victims and their families, IRNA said.
The authorities have announced three days of public mourning in the eastern province, local media reported.
"Gas accumulation in the mine" has made the search operations difficult, local prosecutor Ali Nesaei was quoted by IRNA as saying.
"Currently, the priority is to provide aid to the injured and pull people from under the rubble."
Nesaei added that "the negligence and fault of the relevant agents will be dealt with" later.
Last year, an explosion at a coal mine in the northern city of Damghan killed six people, also likely the result of a methane leak according to local media.
In May 2021, two miners died in a collapse at the same site, media reports said at the time.
A blast in 2017 killed 43 miners in Azad Shahr city in northern Iran, triggering anger towards the authorities.
Mineral-rich Iran has around 1.5 billion tonnes of proven coal reserves, according to state media.
The Tabas mine covers an area of more than 30,000 square kilometres (nearly 11,600 square miles) and holds mass reserves of coking and thermal coal, according to IRNA.
It is "considered the richest and largest coal area in Iran," IRNA said.