Date | 16 September 1986 |
---|---|
Location | Kinross, Mpumalanga, South Africa |
Casualties | |
177 dead and 235 injured |
The Kinross mine disaster (16 September 1986) resulted in the deaths of 177 miners and the injury of 235 others,[1] making it one of the largest mining incidents in South Africa.[1]
The disaster occurred at the Kinross gold mine when welding set alight an acetylene cylinder. The tunnel walls were lined with a polyurethane foam coating to prevent water seepage, which caught alight, along with plastic wire coverings, releasing toxic fumes that suffocated the miners.[2]
After the disaster, the National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) complained about low safety standards in the mines.[2] Workers disrupted a memorial service sponsored by the mine owners, objecting to the exclusion of miner representatives from the event, and staged a day of protests on 1 October 1986 with workers striking to hold memorial services to mourn those who died in the accident.[3]
Other South African mine accidents that killed a large number of people include the 1960 Coalbrook mining disaster, with 437 fatalities,[4] the Vaal Reefs mining disaster, in 1995, which killed 104 mine workers,[5] and the Trans-Natal Colliery methane gas explosion, killing 39.[6]