Dukla Mine
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Dukla mine ( cs, Důl Dukla) is a closed coal mine located in
Dolní Suchá (Polish language, Polish: , german: Nieder Suchau) is a village in Karviná District, Moravian-Silesian Region, Czech Republic. It was a separate municipality but became administratively a part of Havířov in 1960. It has a population of 901 (202 ...
near the city of Havířov in the Czech Republic. A disaster occurred there in 1961, now depicted in film
Dukla 61 ''Dukla 61'' is a 2018 Czech disaster film directed by David Ondříček. The film is set in 1961 when a mining disaster at Dukla Mine in Dolní Suchá killed 108 miners. The film focuses on a family of a man who works at the mine along with hi ...
.


History

It was founded in 1907. The Dukla name was used since 1947. After 1947, it was part
OKD OKD ( cs, Ostravsko-karvinské doly; Ostrava- Karviná Mines) is a major mining company in the Czech Republic, the only producer of hard coal in the country with an annual production of around 8-9 million tonnes from 4 mines with 23 shafts ex ...
which is the abbreviation for Ostrava-Karviná Mines. Previous names were Kaiser Franz-Josef Mine, and Sucha Mine. The top coal production was achieved in 1971 (2041 thousand tons). On 1 July 1995 the mine merged with another local Lazy Mine (together with another nearby František Mine). In 2006, it further merged again with Mine Paskov. Shortly after the 2006 merger, it was decided the mine will be shut down. The last mining day was 10 January 2007.


1961 tragedy

On 7 July 1961 a tragedy occurred that resulted in the death of 108 miners. The youngest miner was not even 17 years old, the oldest was 56 years old. The tragedy involved a fire. It was triggered by a miner who accidentally started a conveyor belt and did not notice it. This happened in the part of the mine where that day was no current mining. The conveyor belt was working idle and eventually thanks to friction the rubber band of it caught fire. When the fire started, there were 338 miners. The fire started during morning shift but was unnoticed. The morning shift ended and new miners from afternoon shift went into the mine. Only around 17:00 the fire was fully detected and dealt with by the mine supervisor. The supervisor did not react to one earlier report about suspicious smell. The fire spread and became extensive. It trapped 108 miners in the section 8 of the mine. The miners suffocated. The only way to stop the fire was to seal the section from oxygen (around midnight). The chance of surviving in the sealed section was zero at the time of the seal. A total of 750 rescue workers assisted in the rescue operation. After the tragedy, all local mines switched to fire-proof belts in conveyors (in addition to other changes made).


References

{{reflist Coal mines in the Czech Republic 1907 establishments in Austria-Hungary 1961 in Czechoslovakia Buildings and structures in Havířov 1961 mining disasters Disasters in Czechoslovakia Coal mining disasters in Europe 2007 disestablishments in the Czech Republic