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Turkey’s Soma mining disaster trial to open next month

Prosecutors are demanding life sentences for the eight managers for each of the deaths in Turkey's deadliest industrial accident
Mourners in Soma following the deaths of 301 miners in May 2014 (AFP)

Dozens of suspects will stand trial next month over Turkey's worst-ever mine disaster in which 301 people were killed, local media said Monday.

Among the defendants due to appear when the trial opens on 13 April are eight executive managers of the Soma mine who are in custody on charges of causing multiple deaths.

To help accommodate the victims' families, the case will be heard at a special tribunal set up in a cultural centre in Akhisar in western Turkey, the private Dogan news agency reported.

Akhisar is located some 40 kilometres from the coal mining town of Soma where the disaster took place last May.

Prosecutors are demanding life sentences for the eight managers for each of the deaths in Turkey's deadliest industrial accident, according to Dogan.

The remaining 37 suspects face up to 15 years in prison for causing multiple deaths and injuries by negligence, it added.

The tragedy at the privately-run operation reignited concerns over lax safety in Turkey, which has the highest number of mining-related deaths in Europe.

A blast ripped through the mine which then collapsed. Most of the victims were trapped in the mine and killed by carbon monoxide poisoning.

Expert reports pointed to several safety violations, including a shortage of carbon monoxide detectors, ceilings made of wood instead of metal, and a lack of high-quality gas masks.

The government has denied claims there were loopholes in safety regulations, saying that Turkish norms meet international standards.

The Soma mine was privatised in 2005 but some, including an MP with Turkey's opposition CHP party, blame the government for failing to investigate previous mining accidents in the area.

Turkey's previous worst mining accident occurred in 1992 when 263 workers were killed in a gas explosion in a mine in Zonguldak in the north of the country.

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