By Jonathan Franklin
Special to The Washington Post
Saturday, October 9, 2010; 9:33 AM
SAN JOSE MINE, Chile -- Chilean rescue workers on Saturday morning completed a rescue tunnel 640 meters deep into a collapsed mine where 33 miners have spent the past two months trapped underground.
The 33 miners, all of whom had spent the last 12 hours in anxious vigil gathered at the section of the tunnel where the drill bit entered, celebrated with glee. Ten minutes after the drill reached the men, they sent messages topside that no one had been injured and they celebrated their ever closer escape from freedom was near.
The slightly angled hole into the San Jose copper and gold mine will now be used to haul out the miners one by one in a specially designed rescue capsule. That operation is expected to begin with seven days, but first Chilean officials must inspect the camera and decide whether to line section with metal tubing.
Within seconds of the drill reaching the miners, a chorus of truck horns echoed through the valley, sending a long awaited signal to family members who had spent the past 48 hours in a vigil of hope and anxiety. Hundreds of anxious family members family members hugged, cried and climbed up the mountainside to celebrate. On the hillside, surrounded by 33 flags -- one for each of the trapped men, the families cheered and began to imagine the day when their loved one would be freed.
"It is almost over, they are about to get out," said Roberto Reyes, 45, a miner whose uncle Mario Gomez is trapped in the mine.
Gomez, 63, is the oldest miner and has been a spiritual leader for the trapped men, leading them in prayer and building an altar deep inside the collapsed mine.
"I am sending him tranquillity and comfort, the worst is over," said Alonso Gallardo, 34, a nephew of Gomez. "He can confront this, he already survived the accident," said Reyes in reference to a mining accident years ago that severed Gomez's fingers and mutilated his hands.
Family members gathered around the embers of campfires, evidence of their 48-hour vigil, and ate breakfast with a smile, sharing coffee and hugs with strangers. Hundreds of foreign journalists rushed about, sending news to the world that "Los 33" were one step closer to freedom.
As horns blared and clowns traipsed through the camp, the 65 day long ordeal of the 32 Chileans and one Bolivian miner shed its air of anxiety as the family´s prepared for a weekend of euphoric celebration.
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