Mexican army divers have rescued a miner from a flooded underground tunnel two weeks after he was first trapped.
Francisco Zapata Nájera, 42, was stuck 300m (985ft) below ground after an embankment collapsed at the gold mine in the northern Mexican state of Sinaloa.
Video of the rescue shows him standing in waist-deep water, telling his rescuers that he never lost faith during his ordeal.
The search continues for another miner who is still missing.
Twenty-five workers were inside the gold mine when the tailings dam – a structure which holds mining waste – burst on 25 March.
Twenty-one managed to get out, but four were trapped.
José Alejandro Cástulo was rescued after five days under ground, and another miner died, but it took rescuers a full 13 days to locate Francisco Zapata.
Following more than 300 hours of searching, divers finally spotted the blinking of the miner’s torch light, which Zapata had turned on and off to alert them to his location.
Once they had identified themselves as specialised military divers, they tell the miner that “your torchlight helped us a lot”.
While Zapata appears visibly relieved in the footage, his ordeal was not yet over.
Due to the flooding in the tunnel leading to his location, the divers could not immediately extract him.
Instead, they left him behind with water, cans of tuna and energy bars – and a promise to return soon.
Credit: bbc.com
The post Trapped miner rescued from flooded Mexican tunnel after 14 days appeared first on The Ghanaian Chronicle.
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