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In impoverished Central Asian valley, coal mining can kill

Three coal miners discuss their plans in an illegal mine in southern Kyrgyzstan, Kyzylkiya, Monday, Sept. 17, 2007. Here in the impoverished Ferghana Valley, illegal coal mining is a dirty, dangerous part of the underground economy. After the region's huge Soviet coal mines closed in the 1990s, jobless men and boys started their own small mining operations, using picks and shovels to claw the fuel out of the mountains. Some are as young as 11, miners say. Three coal miners discuss their plans in an illegal mine in southern Kyrgyzstan, Kyzylkiya, Monday, Sept. 17, 2007. Here in the impoverished Ferghana Valley, illegal coal mining is a dirty, dangerous part of the underground economy. After the region's huge Soviet coal mines closed in the 1990s, jobless men and boys started their own small mining operations, using picks and shovels to claw the fuel out of the mountains. Some are as young as 11, miners say. (AP Photo/Sergey Ponomarev)
Email|Print|Single Page| Text size + By Sergey Ponomarev
Associated Press Writer / May 11, 2008

KYZYL-KIYA, Kyrgyzstan—In the impoverished Ferghana Valley in Kyrgyzstan, illegal coal mining is a dirty, dangerous part of the underground economy.

After the huge Soviet mines in the region closed in the 1990s, jobless men and boys started their own small operations, using picks and shovels to claw coal out of the mountains. Some are as young as 11, miners say.

Today, hundreds -- perhaps thousands -- of miners earn an average they say of about $50 a week in the mines. They haul the coal out one 150-pound sack at a time, and sell them in markets for about $3 each.

"We work for bread," shrugged Ibrahim Almahayev, 43, nearly naked, whose face was smeared with coal dust.

Methane seeps into the hot, narrow mines. When a tunnel collapses, miners say, there is little hope for rescue. But miners feel they don't have much choice. "We go down there because there are no jobs up here," said Abdul Abulkasimov, 54.

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