Latest: Eight workers killed after cave-in at Polish mine

Update 11.55pm: Eight workers have been killed after a cave-in at a Polish copper mine.

Latest: Eight workers killed after cave-in at Polish mine

Update 11.55pm: Eight workers have been killed after a cave-in at a Polish copper mine.

The director of the mine said rescue teams have now recovered the bodies of the last three workers from the Rudna pit in the south-west town of Polkowice.

Pawel Markowski said the deaths marked the greatest tragedy for the copper mining company KGHM in 55 years.

Five other miners have been taken to hospital, but they are not thought to be in a life-threatening condition. Several other workers escaped unscathed.

The tremor occurred shortly after 9pm local time on Tuesday some 1,100 metres (3,608ft) underground.

The German Research Centre for Geosciences reported a magnitude-4.5 shallow earthquake in the region at the time of the cave-in.

Update 8pm: Rescue teams have found the body of a fifth miner and kept up the search for the three others still missing at a Polish copper mine that was hit by a tremor and a cave-in.

Earlier:

Rescue workers are using bare hands in a desperate attempt to save four missing miners.

Four other miners were killed in the tragedy, the mine’s director said.

The tremor occurred shortly after 9pm local time on Tuesday some 1,100 metres underground in the Rudna mine in the south west town of Polkowice.

The German Research Centre for Geosciences reported a magnitude-4.5 shallow earthquake in the region at the time of the cave-in.

The mine’s director, Pawel Markowski, confirmed the death of a fourth miner, a 24-year-old, and said four other miners remain missing.

Five other miners have been taken to hospital, but their lives are not in danger and a few others escaped unscathed.

Nine rescue teams searching for those still missing were about a dozen metres from where they expect to find them, Mr Markowski said.

He said the cave-in area is filled with rock, "which does not mean we will not find empty spaces" where miners could have been saved, in the mine’s heavy equipment zone.

He gave the ages of the other victims as 23, 33 and 47.

Mining authorities have opened an investigation into the cave-in and Prime Minister Beata Szydlo and Health Minister Konstanty Radziwill were heading to the mine later.

Polish politicians observed a minute of silence and prayed for the victims. President Andrzej Duda extended his condolences to the families of the victims and pledged state support for them.

Spokeswoman Jolanta Piatek said work continues in other areas of the mine, which is operated by the KGHM Polska Miedz, or Polish Copper Company.

In 2013, 19 miners trapped in the Rudna mine following a local tremor and a cave-in were rescued with no major injuries - but this year alone more than 10 miners have been killed at KGHM mines.

Known as the Polish State Mining and Metallurgical Combine under communism, KGHM went through restructuring and partial privatisation in 1991 as Poland shifted to a market economy.

It has grown to be one of the world’s major copper and silver producers. It also has mines in Chile, Canada and the United States.

- AP

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