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Anxious colleagues waited in vain for news of survivors |
1986: Kinross Miners 'killed where they stood' |
England have
At least 177 people have died during a lethal fire in a South African gold mine.
Poisonous gas spread rapidly through the shafts and tunnels of the Kinross mine in the Eastern Transvaal, killing most of the miners where they worked.
Six men are still missing but it is believed there is little chance of them being found alive.
A welder's spark ignited plastic foam lining the walls of a tunnel, starting the fire which resulted in one of the worst disasters in mining history.
The foam is used to stop water seepage, but contains a sealant called Rigiseal which gives off poisonous fumes when it burns.
The chemical is banned from use in British pits, and is soon to be barred in Australia.
The fire spread rapidly, and a spokesman for the mine's owners confirmed many of those killed had little chance of escaping.
"I think most of the 170 people succumbed to the toxic fumes in or near their place of normal work," he said.
A British man working at the mine said: "They didn't stand a chance - they were trapped by the smoke."
The South African National Union of Mineworkers accused the owners of Kinross of not paying enough attention to the safety of their employees.
The union leader, Cyril Ramaphosa, told the BBC the disaster could have been avoided.
"We are horrified that this type of accident can take place in this day and age in the mining industry.
"In our view we are obviously back to the dark ages of mining - and there doesn't seem to be much improvement in safety standards," he said.
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