Kyrgyz Coal
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Tash-Kumyr, Kyrgyzstan
A boy pauses from his work for a portrait at the entrance of a new coal mine on the outskirts of Tash-Kumyr, Kyrgyzstan. Soviets founded the town in the Naryn River valley during the 1940s after large coal deposits were found nearby. The USSR abandoned its occupation of Kyrgyzstan in 1991, and left some 20,000 residents of Tash-Kumyr under the fledgling leadership of the newly independent country. This photo essay is a look at the lives, struggles, and spirit of the people in Tash-Kumyr as their country continues a transition into a life without the direct influence and financial support of Soviet Russia. -
Tash-Kumyr, Kyrgyzstan
A buzzard glides over Tash-Kumyr, Krygyzstan on New Year's Day, 2012. The small town's location--along the west bank of the Naryn River on the southern edge of the Tien Shan Mountains--should lend itself to being a popular resort town. However, as Kyrgyzstan continues a bumpy transition to independence, the community faces physical and economic realities that are far from comfortable. -
Coal singlehandedly keeps the wheels on Tash-Kumyr's economy, but claims plenty of victims in the process. Permanently disfigured miners are seen throughout the town unless confined to their beds. Coal is the primary source of heat and cooking fuel in homes, which results in a thick, soot-heavy haze filling the valley in the winter months. Local medical professionals attribute a wide range of the population's health problems to the proliferation of coal.
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As two children watch with headlamps mounted, a coal miner chips away at the ceiling deep in the tunnels of a rogue coal mine outside of Tash-Kumyr, Kyrgyzstan on January 3, 2012. Since the Soviets left in 1991, safety regulations and quality equipment have vanished in Kyrgyzstan's mining communities.
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Bonds are strong among the miners, and many friends begin and end shifts with a meal and a shot or two of vodka or cognac.
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Cognac is the drink of choice in town, and is especially popular among miners, who use it to medicate against the headaches that result from breathing toxic air in the caves.
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An unmissable sight in Tash-Kumyr are the stacks and stacks of white bags filled with coal. Some families have large orders delivered to their homes and businesses and others buy a bag or two from street vendors as their intermittent income allows. The raw coal is burned in stoves throughout the village to cook and heat homes.
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A miner closes the door of an old military ambulance converted to a coal delivery truck. On any given day, the vehicles coming down out of the mountains and into town could be carrying either the bags of coal that represent the town's archaic economy, or injured miners that represent the town's treacherous conditions.
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A Tash-Kumyr resident walks away from an abandoned depot at the edge of town after scavenging for enough coal to fill his bag. A bag of coal typically costs the average citizen 150 Com, or 3 American dollars. However, frugal and venturesome residents can find abandoned coal caches to stock up from. During better days, trains ran over these rails frequently to load coal for delivery across the Soviet Union and its territories. Piles of coal that were never delivered remain scattered along the tracks.
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The bucket of a rickety excavator moves from the wall of an open pit mine towards a group of sorters waiting below. While open-pit mining is safer than underground mining, the equipment left from the Soviet era is deteriorating fast. Generally, there is not enough money to replace or repair broken equipment.
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A grave marker on the slopes west of town.
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Sartpaev Ayibek Saribaebich gazes up the hill behind his family's home from his wheelchair on December 31, 2011. The former coal miner built the home on the west bank of the Naryn River with the help of his brother in 1998. Four years later, a mining accident restricted him to this wheelchair, and, with his home sitting on a steep hill, he can not leave his property unless several men are available to carry him up to the road above.
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Saribaev Kayrat, 10, waits patiently for his father to position himself into a wheelchair at their home in Tash-Kumyr. The boy was less than a year old when his father's legs and pelvis were crushed in a partial coal mine collapse. Today, he is integral in helping his father move in and out of bed and around the house.
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Sartpaev's wife and daughter wheel him to their bathhouse for his shower.
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Sartpaev Ayibek Saribaebich lay still after receiving a massage from his wife, Sartpaeva Tinar. In January of 2002, Sartpaev's pelvis and lower spine were crushed in a partial mine collapse. After several months, doctors determined that the top half of his right femur needed to be removed, resulting in the deep, caved in scar seen here. The town's lone, small hospital is not adequately prepared for the catastrophic injuries suffered by coal miners, and families generally can't afford to travel elsewhere for medical attention. Wives of injured miners are taught a variety of massage techniques, which pass as physical therapy.
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Sartpaev Ayibek Saribaebich waits for his sons to carry him through the door of their home. His oldest helps the family by working a few shifts a week in the mines, but it will never be enough to realize Sartpaev's dream of moving to Bishkek--Kyrgyzstan's largest city--where there are doctors, therapy and job opportunities for the disabled, and more importantly, an absence of coal mines.
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In the area that serves as their dining room, living room and bedroom of their 5th floor apartment in Tash-Kumyr, Tashmatova Zamira holds the hand of her badly injured husband, Atabaev Tokoy Riskulbekovich on New Year's Day, 2012. The young couple experienced an unfortunate and unexpected hardship when Atabaev was injured in a partial mine collapse. His hip was broken when a large block of coal separated from the ceiling of the mine he was working in and fell on him. His doctor expects a full recovery, but even if that is so, Atabaev says the money he made from mining is not worth his life, and claims he will never step foot in a coal mine again.
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From left, Surarov Daniar, 5, Surarov Talgat, 2, and Makcatbek Uulu Eldiar, 7 stand at the door of the home they share with their mother, Rulinara Umerova. The boys' father and oldest brother were killed in a partial coal mine collapse in 2009, and Rulinara struggles to keep bills paid and food supplied on the 60 dollars per month that the Kyrgyz government offers those widowed by mining accidents. She relies on assistance from her brother-in-law and old school mates to keep her apartment and make ends meet.
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As darkness falls on New Year's Day 2012, young boys find firecrackers left from the night before along the abandoned railroad tracks that cut through Tash-Kumyr.
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Two boys draw a large heart in the snow outside of the cemetery on the west slopes of town after a fresh snow on New Years Day 2012.