Workers refuse to return to Indonesia mine after accident

By AFP
May 31, 2013

TIMIKA: Thousands of workers at a US-owned mine in eastern Indonesia are refusing to return to work until investigations into...

TIMIKA: Thousands of workers at a US-owned mine in eastern Indonesia are refusing to return to work until investigations into one of the country's worst mining accidents are completed, a union said Friday.

Freeport-McMoRan resumed some operations Tuesday at its Grasberg gold and copper mine in Papua province after an almost two-week shutdown caused by a tunnel collapse that killed 28 workers. Ten others were rescued.

Some open-pit mining and milling operations were restarted, although Freeport said underground mining had not resumed due to maintenance work.

But a union that represents 18,000 of the more than 24,000 workers at the mine said its members would not return to work until investigations into the accident were complete.

Union spokesman Virgo Solossa told AFP the decision was in line with Freeport policy to halt operations following accidents while probes were still ongoing.

"We also feel that the people under investigation, such as the head of underground operations and other managers, should be sent home so they don't interfere with investigations," he said.

Separate probes by the government and the company into the accident are being carried out but there has as yet been no indication what caused the tunnel to cave in on May 14 as 38 workers underwent a safety training session.

Next Story >>>

More From World