Human remains have potentially been found inside the Pike River Mine, nearly 13 years since explosions killed 29 men, police have said today.
Police and mining experts have been drilling holes deep into the underground coal mine on the West Coast of the South Island, searching for more clues in the ongoing criminal probe into the disaster.
Today, police have revealed that recent images captured from the borehole drilling programme indicate the possibility of human remains in the vicinity of borehole six.
Borehole six is in an area where men were known to be building a stopping, or wall, when the mine first exploded on November 19, 2010.
However, two pathologists have viewed the images and are unable to determine whether they definitively show human remains, police said.
Police have been conducting more bore drilling at Pike River. Photo / 九一星空无限
Officers have spoken to the families of the three men believed to have been working in the area.
Detective Superintendent Darryl Sweeney, the current officer in charge of the police investigation, took questions at a media conference today.
This week, officers have been on the West Coast to speak to the families of three men.
Twelve years on from the disaster, he recognises it鈥檚 still a difficult process for the families.
鈥漁ur thoughts are always with them,鈥 he said.
鈥淲e recognise this is an incredibly difficult process for the families of the 29 men killed at Pike River,鈥 said Detective Superintendent Darryl Sweeney said.
Detective Superintendent Darryl Sweeney, the current officer in charge of the police investigation, took questions at a media conference today. Photo / George Heard
鈥淲hile we can鈥檛 say with any certainty that we鈥檝e located human remains, we have shared what we鈥檝e found as well as the pathologists鈥 conclusions.
Police have a clear very understanding of where all the men were working that day and have told the families involved that it鈥檚 very likely they were in that area.
When the borehole stage ends in the next few weeks, the criminal investigation will conclude and he hopes that they will have some conclusions by the end of the year.
鈥漌e鈥檙e close,鈥 Sweeney said.
He added that they now have the 鈥渇acts and evidence鈥 to be able to make some decisions. However, he wouldn鈥檛 say if anyone would be charged at this stage.
Although they have been using world-leading imagery, pathologists have taken a conservative approach in identifying them, Sweeney said, adding that a coalmine is a very difficult environment.
When the borehole stage ends in the next few weeks, the criminal investigation will conclude, Sweeney said. Photo / George Heard
But he said his own common sense suggests that clothing and items there would be 鈥渁ssociated鈥 being with a person.
鈥淥ur thoughts are with the families as they process this news.鈥
Work began on 10 additional boreholes in late January this year.
The final three holes will be drilled in the coming weeks, concluding the police investigation at the mine.
In November 2021, a specialist borehole camera spotted the remains of at least two men, with the possibility of a third, in an area where six or eight men were working at the time of the explosion.
The bodies are in the 鈥渇urthest part of the mine from the entrance鈥, which means police will not be able to recover them.
Smoke billows from the ventilation shaft after the fourth explosion in the Pike River coal mine where 29 miners and contractors are still fatally trapped to this day. Photo / File
鈥淚t鈥檚 not unexpected, we know there鈥檚 29 men down there and we鈥檙e drilling boreholes where we know people were working,鈥 Superintendent Peter Read said at the time.
鈥淲e still haven鈥檛 finished the boreholes yet so there is a possibility there might be more [bodies found] - we can鈥檛 rule that out.鈥
On Friday, November 19, 2010, at about 3.44pm, an explosion ripped through the Pike River underground coal mine, followed by subsequent explosions. Two men made it out alive but another 29 were unaccounted for.
Royal Commission on the Pike River Coal Mine tragedy found that the 鈥渋mmediate cause of the first explosion was the ignition of a substantial volume of methane gas鈥, but could only speculate on what might have triggered ignition.
鈥淭he mine was new and the owner, Pike River Coal Ltd (Pike), had not completed the systems and infrastructure necessary to safely produce coal. Its health and safety systems were inadequate,鈥 the commission鈥檚 report said.
Pike River Mine family members Anna Osborne, left, and Sonya Rockhouse have never stopped fighting for justice. Photo / Mark Mitchell.
WorkSafe laid charges against former Pike River boss Peter Whittall in 2013, but the case was dropped after a $3.4 million settlement was paid 鈥 a deal the Supreme Court later said was unlawful.
The money was split between the two survivors and the families of the 29 missing, a total of $110,000 for each man who had been down the mine that day.
Australian company VLI Drilling, which employed three of the men who died, also pleaded guilty to health and safety charges and was fined $46,800.
The Pike River Recovery Agency (PRRA) completed its $50m re-entry of the mine鈥檚 access tunnel to try and recover remains and find any forensic clues in 2021.
It had been due to permanently seal the mine while police were partway through their borehole investigations.
But some Pike River families who lost loved ones, and had fought for years to try and get authorities to try and find their bodies, launched legal action to try and stop it from happening.
Some of the families remain hopeful that a criminal prosecution is still possible.
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