Death toll in collapsed Indonesia mine rises to 9

Death toll rises to 9 at Freeport's collapsed mine in Indonesia; 19 other workers feared dead

TIMIKA, Indonesia (AP) -- Rescuers recovered the bodies of four more workers from a collapsed underground room at a giant U.S.-owned gold and copper mine in Indonesia, bringing the confirmed death toll to nine, police and company officials said Sunday. Nineteen other workers were missing and feared dead.

The Big Gossan underground training facility at the PT Freeport Indonesia mine collapsed last Tuesday when 38 workers were undergoing safety training. Ten injured miners were rescued.

Mining operations at the Grasberg mine in the easternmost province of Papua have been suspended since the accident to pay respects to the victims and to concentrate on the rescue effort. The company said the accident was expected to have no significant impact on its operations.

It said three bodies were found overnight buried under tons of rocks and dirt. The body of the fourth worker was recovered late Sunday, Papua police spokesman Lt. Col. Gede Sumerta Jaya said.

"There is no possibility of life five days after the cave-in ... this is really a heartbreaking accident," he said.

The company said in a statement that rescuers had sighted the remains of six other people in the rubble and were working to recover them, but the process was being slowed by the need to stabilize the ground and roof because of falling rocks.

It said Richard Adkerson, president and CEO of its parent company, Freeport McMoran Copper and Gold Inc., arrived at the scene Saturday and visited the injured workers and the families of those still buried at the accident site.

Around 1,000 workers were still blocking a main road about two miles (three kilometers) away in solidarity with the victims, and to seek a guarantee of worker safety underground.

Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has ordered Freeport and government agencies to thoroughly investigate the accident. More than 20,000 workers are employed at the mine in the remote mountains of Papua — home to a decades-long, low-level insurgency — which has repeatedly been targeted by arson attacks, roadside bombs and blockades since production began in the 1970s.