ALMATY, Kazakhstan, Oct 28, 2023 (BSS/AFP) - At least 21 people were killed
Saturday when a fire broke out at a mine in Kazakhstan belonging to the
global steel giant ArcelorMittal, prompting the government to order an "end
to investment cooperation" with the company.
It was the second deadly disaster in two months at an ArcelorMittal site in
Kazakhstan, after five miners were killed in an accident at a mine in the
same region in August.
"The government has been ordered to end investment cooperation with
ArcelorMittal," Kazakh President Kassym-Jomart Tokayev said in a statement
shortly after the fire near the town of Karaganda, an industrial region in
central Kazakhstan.
ArcelorMittal's operations in the country have regularly been accused by
authorities of failing to respect safety and environmental regulations.
At least 21 miners died at the Kostenko mine, and a search was continuing for
23 others who were among more than 200 underground when the fire struck, the
company said in a statement.
Regional officials had said early that 40 rescuers had been sent to the site,
with the government's emergency response minister, Syrym Sharipkhanov,
announcing he would be arriving on site soon.
No cause of the accident has yet been released.
- Series of accidents -
The fire was the worst mining accident in Kazakhstan since 2006, when 41
miners died at another ArcelorMittal site.
Tokayev said an investigative commission would be set up to determine the
cause.
After the fire at an ArcelorMittal coal mine in August, Tokayev denounced the
"systemic character" of accidents involving the company that he said left
more than 100 people dead since 2006.
ArcelorMittal operates around a dozen mines in the highly polluted industrial
region of the vast, resource-rich country, formerly part of the Soviet Union.
Extraction of iron and coal as well as oil, gas and uranium have made its
economy the largest in Central Asia, though accidents are common because of
ageing infrastructure and equipment and lax safety standards.
In December 2022, the government had threatened to ban ArcelorMittal from
operating in the country after a worker died in what the company called "an
accident" at its factory in Termitau.
The death came just a month after five miners were killed at another Arcelor
site in the region.