SNIZHNE, Ukraine /// The darkness bred fear. Tolek Golovko tried to calm down as a wagon carried him 800 meters down into the mine. The boy was afraid the wooden pillars would fail and the ceiling would come crashing down on him and the rest of the group. That happens on a regular basis here in Eastern Ukraine. Most recently in March last year, 33 people were killed when a mine collapsed outside of Donetsk. That one was large and state-owned, so the news went global. But when illegal mines like the one in Snizhne collapse, it is not always reported. Instead, families are compensated, mines are closed—and they become another secret mass grave deep in the woods. Read the whole story here.From me and writer Per Christian Selmer-Anderssen's story on how the illegal coal mines in Eastern-Ukraine is used to keep fueling the war. Published in Slate, Roads and Kingdom and DN Lørdag.
Ukraine’s Illegal Miners Come Out of the Darkness
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