MENU
Documenting
war crimes in Ukraine

The Tribunal for Putin (T4P) global initiative was set up in response to the all-out war launched by Russia against Ukraine in February 2022.

Similar articles

Safety is not just another wordThe Price of Zasyadko’s “gold” or Money above lifeEvery fifth industrial death is that of a miner‘I stole a fuel truck from the Russians’ — a pensioner from Dymer provided fuel for a local hospitalZaporizhzhia nuclear plant engineer held and tortured by Russian invaders for over a year Russia’s reported mining of the Crimean Titanium factory 'could kill tens of thousands' ‘My mom wanted to take poison, but she learned from a letter that we were alive.’ The story of a doctor from Mariupol, part 2Ukraine’s penitentiary institutions and the warVovchansk Engineering Works: Dungeons on the Chechen Model“I entered a store and burst into tears” — three weeks under bombardment in Mariupol Russia tries to break Ukrainian political prisoner by threatening his wife and children No money for medics in occupied Crimea & Russia, while 15 billion spent to rubberstamp Putin’s life presidencyAccountability for international crimes committed in Ukraine between 2014–2018European Court of Human Rights demands answers from Russia over downing of MH17 over UkraineA brief description of KHPG strategic litigations in January–June 2018Prisoners die in unexplained circumstances in Russian-controlled ‘Luhansk republic’ prisonsRussia’s FSB needs Ukrainian ‘saboteurs’ in occupied Crimea – fictitious ones will doProsecution witness testifies for the defence in Russia’s latest ‘Crimea sabotage trial’Russia’s Donbas proxies flood Yunkom Mine despite risk of radioactive catastropheA brief description of KHPG strategic litigations in January–December 2017

Karl Marx Mine had ignored orders to stop work

11.06.2008   

According to the information centre of the State Committee on Industrial Safety, on 6 June the mine had been sealed, yet documentation confirms that work at the mine was not suspended. This will be investigated by the prosecutor’s office. At present rescue work is continuing, however there is little hope of finding the remaining 12 miners alive.  24 men were rescued yesterday, and another miner is known to have died.

The fate of the 110-year-old mine is not clear. . Deputy Prime Minister Oleksandr Turchynov has not excluded the possibility that the mine will be closed.

However some specialists are against this, pointing out the mine gives high-quality coal.

Despite the disaster, miners and their families are also against closure. There is quite simply nowhere else to work in the town.

Based on information from www.ictv.ua

 Share this