Three miners have lost their lives following a cave-in at the Kumroch gold mine in Russia’s Far Eastern Kamchatka peninsula, according to Sergey Lebedev, head of the regional Emergency Situations Ministry. The tragic incident occurred in the Ust-Kamchatsky District, where the Bystrinskaya Mining Company operates the site, which is slated for full mining and processing production by 2026.
Lebedev reported that emergency response teams were immediately dispatched to the collapse site. Rescue workers successfully retrieved the bodies of the three miners from the rubble, confirming the fatalities.
This accident is part of a concerning trend of mining-related incidents in Russia. Earlier in the week, a similar tragedy struck in western Siberia’s Kemerovo region, where one worker died in a rock slide. Just days prior, another deadly accident occurred at the Denisovsky Vostochny coal mine in the Far Eastern republic of Sakha (Yakutia).
The string of incidents raises serious questions about safety standards and practices in Russia’s mining industry, particularly in remote and challenging environments like Kamchatka. The Kumroch mine, being a developing project, may face additional scrutiny regarding its safety protocols and infrastructure.