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More than 100 dead in Ukraine mine disaster
By Markus Salzmann
30 November 2007
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A devastating accident in a coal mine in eastern Ukraine on
November 18 has left more than 100 dead. Approximately 1,000 metres
below ground, the Zasyadko mine near the city of Donetsk filled
with methane gas that then exploded. More than 450 men were working
underground at the time. Rescue attempts were made more difficult
by the fire that raged in the pit for several hours. Days following
the accident many workers are still missing, for whom there can
be little hope of survival.
This latest pit disasterthe most serious in the countrys
historyis only one in a whole series of mining accidents
in Ukraine, Russia and the other former Soviet republics. It shows
again the bloody price that workers living in the former Soviet
Union are paying for the restoration of capitalism and the subordination
of economic activities to the profit system.
In September this year, 13 workers died in an accident at the
same mine. According to miners union representatives, nothing
was done following the earlier accident.
At present, some 10,000 work in the Zasyadko pit, mining up
to 10,000 tonnes of coal a day. Two serious accidents have already
claimed the lives of more than 100 miners in recent years. Eight
years ago, in the neighbouring area of Luhansk, the most serious
accident so far cost 80 people their lives.
The pit in Zasyadko began operations in 1958 and since then
has never been properly modernised. Of approximately 200 pits
in Ukraine, only 10 were modernised in the last 20 years. The
technology employed has become hopelessly outdated and is inadequate
from the standpoint of the most basic safety requirements. Zasyadko
is not even one of the oldest pits in Ukraine; a third of all
the mines in the country are more than 100 years old.
The majority of Ukrainian mines are completely run-down. Most
do not even have sensors to warn of the danger of gas. The age
of the equipment means a rising accident and death rate among
miners. Statistically, every million tonnes of coal produced in
Ukraine in recent years has meant 5 dead and 350 injured miners.
On average, one miner dies underground each day.
The Berlin Tagesspiegel commented: This is the
reason why in Ukraine, alongside the statistics for production
costs, prices and profitability of a pit there is another column:
How many human lives do one million tonnes of coal cost? Twenty
years ago, the average was 1.54; 10 years ago the figure was 3.62
and rising.
Coal mining is one of the main sources of income in eastern
Ukraine. At the same time, productivity in the mines is very low
compared with other states. A Ukrainian miner produces only approximately
100 tonnes of coal per year. By comparison, in Poland it is 400
tonnes, and in the US, 4,000 tonnes.
To run the mines at a profit, the operators have abandoned
all safety precautions and pay miserable wages. Mining is one
of the few jobs in the east of the country offering a chance to
earn a living. A Ukrainian miner earns on average US$100 a month,
comparatively better wages than most Ukrainians. Miners are lucky,
however, to actually receive these wages. According to union estimates,
workers are owed millions in unpaid wages, although they are provided
with meals at work and receive healthcare via the company.
Low wages and piecework force the miners to ignore safety regulations
and take life-threatening risks. As in neighbouring Russia, part
of the wage is calculated according to the quantity of coal produced
on a shift. Experts have criticised this system in Ukraine for
a long time. Payment according to production quotas puts workers
under pressure to continue mining even when the concentration
of methane gas is too high.
The extremely low productivity of the Ukrainian pits has led
to several mines being closed in recent years. High unemployment
and the generally precarious social situation have led to a further
cruel phenomenon: more and more people are forced to mine illegally
in the shut-down pits.
These self-made pits are called Scháchty Otschájanja,
or mines of despair. Using ancient equipment and under constant
danger of collapse, former miners work here for 10 to 12 hours
for as little as 1 or 2 euros a day, producing coal that is then
sold on the black market. There are no statistics covering these
mines, but one can assume that dozens of people lose their lives
in them each year.
President Viktor Yushchenko, who travelled to Donetsk following
the disaster and has since called for a three-day period of state
mourning, has accused his rival of many years, Prime Minister
Viktor Yanukovych, of failing to reform the mining industry and
improve safety standards. While this is probably true, responsibility
for the recurring disasters is borne by the countrys entire
ruling elite.
The mines play an important role for enterprises and government
in Ukraine. They provide energy for the iron industry, which is
also located in the east of the country, thus reducing the need
to spend foreign currency on procuring energy from the world market.
Moreover, politicians and senior civil servants have enriched
themselves by siphoning off the funds that were actually intended
to modernise the pits. The World Bank alone has provided Ukraine
with several hundred million dollars for the restructuring of
the run-down pits. A large part of this money has simply evaporated
through corruption.
Like the entire economic system of the country, corruption
also marks this branch of industry. Most pits are partially state-owned
and are operated by people who enjoy the best relations with the
political cliques that have governed the Ukraine since the collapse
of the Soviet Union.
Zasyadko is a prime example. The chairman of the supervisory
board of the mine is Yukhym Zvyagilsky, a former prime minister
and an influential figure in the so-called Donetsk clan. Zvyagilsky
worked during the Soviet era as a mining engineer and was a director
of several pits. In 1990, he was elected to parliament to represent
Donetsk.
His contacts with the ruling powers helped him to exploit the
changes that came about in the course of Ukraines independence
to further develop his influence. Starting from 1992, Zvyagilsky
became chairman of the Donetsk town council and in 1993 was first
deputy prime minister of Ukraine. From September 1993 to June
1994, he temporarily held the office of prime minister. In 1994,
he was elected as a delegate to the Ukrainian parliament, the
Rada. Until his dismissal, Zvyagilsky enjoyed close political
contacts with the former head of state, Leonid Kuchma During his
term as a head of government, Zvyagilsky was repeatedly accused
of conducting illegal sales of national energy reserves. However,
his good relations with the highest echelons of the legal system
meant that he never faced any charges.
The Donetsk group is a known quantity in Ukrainian politics
and exerts substantial influence, particularly through Viktor
Yanukovych. The economic basis for the political influence of
the Donetsk group is formed by the Corporation Industrialny Soyuz
Donbassa (Industrial Union of Donbass), which has grown since
2001 to become the second largest Ukrainian company. The enterprise
controls the entire supplies of coal and natural gas for the industrial
companies of the region. Its subsidiaries include several mines
and industrial companies, and also the football club Shakhtar
Donetsk, whose president, the multibillionaire Rinat Akhmetov,
is also one of the most powerful men in the region. Akhmetov largely
financed Yanukovychs election campaigns and is also a parliamentary
deputy for his Party of the Regions.
The cornerstone of the power of the Donetsk elite is their
exclusive control of the countrys coal-mining sector. Zvyagilsky
has played a key role in this. As an important member of the Stalinist
power elite, he was able to push through new ownership structures
in the mining industry.
The regions miners were considered to be very militant,
and protests against the selling off of the state-owned property
were not infrequent. With the help of the local trade unions,
Zvyagilsky was able to keep the workers in check and deliver up
a profitable industry to the new elite. When miners took strike
action in summer 1993, raising social and political demands and
calling for new elections, Zvyagilsky, as well as other regional
leaders, took over the government in Kiev, in order to tame the
wild east.
Today, Zvyagilsky is chairman of the board of the corporation
that runs Zasyadko, and in that capacity bears responsibility
for the miners deaths. Zvyagilsky rejects all responsibility
for the disaster and claims that much money was invested in the
safety of the mine in recent years. His attitude is characteristic
of the criminal, corrupt elite that has enriched itself on the
backs of the general population, and which exclusively follows
its own interests.
When the anger of the family members of the dead miners became
too loud to overlook, and some of the media pointed to the lack
of safety precautions, he told the Delo newspaper: If
so many people die and no one knows the reasons, then perhaps
the mine must be closed. There could hardly be a more cynical
and contemptuous statement. Zvyagilsky is posing an ultimatum
that the miners either accept their fatally dangerous working
conditions, or they will no longer have any work.
See Also:
Russian mine disaster kills
at least 38
[25 May 2007]
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