Polish miners rescued after seven-hour search

Nineteen men were trapped 600 metres underground after earthquake struck southern Poland

Miners walk to mine buildings after being freed from 600 metres below the surface at the Rudna copper mine in south Poland today. Photograph: Mieczyslaw Michalak/Agencja Gazeta/Reuters
Miners walk to mine buildings after being freed from 600 metres below the surface at the Rudna copper mine in south Poland today. Photograph: Mieczyslaw Michalak/Agencja Gazeta/Reuters

Nineteen miners trapped 600 metres underground by a cave-in at a copper mine in southern Poland have been freed after a seven-hour search.

The men were trapped by fallen rock at the Rudna copper mine in Polkowice after a magnitude-4.7 earthquake struck the area.

“It was a very difficult rescue action,” the head of the rescue team, Grzegorz Wolak, said. “We did not know if they would live.”

A team of 25 worked through the night to dig their way to the trapped miners, who were luckily all together and in a well-ventilated area when the cave-in occurred.

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One of the rescuers, Tomasz Szafirowicz, said that the miners “were very tired but very happy to see us.”

“They knew they would return to their families,” he said.

One man suffered minor head injuries but all the others are in good shape and were able to return home.