An Indonesian man died today in the second fatal accident in around two weeks to hit a US-owned mine in eastern Indonesian, the operator said, raising fresh safety concerns at the site.
The accident comes after a tunnel collapsed at Freeport-McMoRan’s giant Grasberg mine in Papua province on
May 14, killing 28 workers undergoing safety training. The other 10 in the training session were rescued.
Herman Wahid died in hospital today, a day after a surge of wet ore material in an underground mine engulfed the truck he was operating.
The company said the accident was not related to the tunnel collapse, which occurred some two kilometres (1.2
miles) away, in one of the biggest mining accidents in the country’s history.
“Our thoughts and prayers are with Herman’s family and close ones,” Freeport’s local subsidiary president director
Rozik B said in a statement, adding that Wahid had a wife and three children.
Union officials said some of the company’s more than 24,000 workers would not return to the site on safety concerns
and until investigations were completed.
The first accident led to a two-week shutdown of operations at the mine, although Freeport said it had enough
stocks to make its shipments.
Freeport resumed some activities on Tuesday as the Indonesian government and company conduct two separate probes
into the tunnel collapse.
Grasberg has a troubled history. A three-month workers strike in 2011 crippled production, and around the same time
there was a spate of deadly shootings in the mine’s vicinity.
————–(AFP)