Associated Press — Rains and flooding have slowed rescue efforts at a Zimbabwean mine where a shaft collapsed last week, trapping at least 10 artisanal miners.
Hopes of finding survivors are vanishing and relatives camped at the site on Tuesday expressed their desperation for decent burials of their loved ones who they now presume are dead.
The mine shaft in Bindura town, about 70 kilometers (about 43 miles) northeast of the capital, Harare, collapsed Wednesday after artisanal miners digging for gold blasted a support pillar, said deputy minister Polite Kambanura.
The mine was no longer operational, and the artisanal miners who use rudimentary and unsafe methods took over, he said while touring the site on Tuesday.
Rescuers retrieved one body on Monday, but given the rains and flooding, rescue efforts have been hindered, he said.
Kambanura said about 10 miners are trapped under rubble and water. An association representing small scale miners, however, estimated 40 miners were trapped. Ascertaining the actual number is difficult due to the haphazard nature of artisanal mining in the economically struggling southern African country.
"Maybe, by some miracle we might find some still alive, it has happened before," said Kambanura, referring to an incident when some artisanal miners survived after days of being trapped underground last year.
But some relatives of the miners camped at the site were less optimistic.