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Gleision deaths: Pit manager offered to help rescuers | Gleision deaths: Pit manager offered to help rescuers |
(35 minutes later) | |
A mine manager who escaped an inrush of water which killed four of his colleagues offered to go back down the pit to help rescue them, a court heard. | A mine manager who escaped an inrush of water which killed four of his colleagues offered to go back down the pit to help rescue them, a court heard. |
Malcolm Fyfield managed to drag himself out of Gleision drift mine after a planned explosion caused 650,000 gallons of water to flood the mine. | Malcolm Fyfield managed to drag himself out of Gleision drift mine after a planned explosion caused 650,000 gallons of water to flood the mine. |
Swansea Crown Court heard he offered to show rescuers the route he had come out of but he was stopped. | Swansea Crown Court heard he offered to show rescuers the route he had come out of but he was stopped. |
Mr Fyfield and owners MNS Mining Ltd deny manslaughter charges. | Mr Fyfield and owners MNS Mining Ltd deny manslaughter charges. |
David Powell, 50, Charles Breslin, 62, Philip Hill, 44, and Garry Jenkins, 39 drowned when water gushed into the area they were working in after they blasted into a flooded old section of the mine. | David Powell, 50, Charles Breslin, 62, Philip Hill, 44, and Garry Jenkins, 39 drowned when water gushed into the area they were working in after they blasted into a flooded old section of the mine. |
In transcripts of police interviews read to the jury, Mr Fyfield told officers he wanted to return to the pit to help with the rescue efforts. | In transcripts of police interviews read to the jury, Mr Fyfield told officers he wanted to return to the pit to help with the rescue efforts. |
The former mine manager told police how he was helped out of the mine by a firefighter. | The former mine manager told police how he was helped out of the mine by a firefighter. |
"I was put on the floor and I offered to go back down to show the route I had come out of, maybe they [rescue workers] could have shown them [miners] the same route out, but the fireman said 'you're not going anywhere mate'," Mr Fyfield said. | |
'Minimal water' | |
The trial heard how Mr Fyfield took a surveyor into the mine before he took on the role because he did not believe a green hatched area on the pit map was a so-called precautionary zone. | |
Fyfield said the surveyor told him "there was nothing to say you cannot enter it". | |
"I was legally allowed to take coal from the green hatched area because there was nothing that indicated to me that it wasn't extractable," he added. | |
A test drill of the area showed a minimal amount of water, the court heard. | |
"I was of the opinion that there was no serious quantity of water there to jeopardise the work," Mr Fyfield told police. | |
The trial continues. | The trial continues. |
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