https://www.scoop.co.nz/stories/PO1211/S00043/qa-greg-boyed-interviews-bernie-monk.htm
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Q+A: Greg Boyed interviews Bernie Monk |
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Sunday 4 November, 2012
Q+A: Greg Boyed
interviews Bernie Monk.
Q+A,
9-10am Sundays on TV ONE.
Thanks
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Q+A: GREG BOYED INTERVIEWS BERNIE MONK
GREG BOYED
Tomorrow
we’ll find out what the Royal Commission thinks caused the
explosion at the Pike River mine two years ago. Cabinet will
discuss the report before making it public. 29 men were
killed. The families aren’t hopeful they will learn
anything new. They say it’s all speculation because no one
has gone more than 300 metres into the mine. Bernie Monk,
whose son Michael was killed in the explosion, has worked
hard to make sure the families aren’t forgotten. Bernie
Monk is in Greymouth and he joins us now. Good morning,
Bernie. What are you hoping to hear from the government from
this report?
BERNIE MONK, Pike River
Families Spokesman
Well, I think, you know,
we’re gonna get most of the truth out of this commission.
I’ve got every confidence in the men that were
commissioned to do this hearing, and I think we’ll get
probably 99% of where we want to be at and let the country
know what we’ve had to put up with, not only in the months
that we’ve had since the disaster but what actually went
wrong down there.
GREG What have
you put up with, Bernie? Just let us know, since two years
ago.
BERNIE
Well, I mean, no one’s ever come to sit around the tables
with the families and discussed anything about getting down
the mine. All the experts have said to us that it’s too
unsafe to do. We’ve fought hard to have dialogue with all
these people, but no one seems to want to come forward, so
we’ve had to go alone. We are now bringing people in from
overseas ourselves, the families are, and only in the last
big breakthrough since Solid Energy have taken over we’ve
had people round the table, and they said that this job can
be done and we just need to put the expertise in place, and
it won’t be long before we’ll know rightly that we’ll
be able to get down there and answer a few questions that
should have been done at least 18 months ago.
GREG Bernie, on
the subject of people from overseas, I understand a group of
experts arrived from the UK today. What are you hoping from
them? Realistically, are they going to be the men who go
down and find the remains of the 29 men?
BERNIE No. They’re
going to put- Obviously, you know, safety is a top priority.
I think we’ve done that many risk assessments on this.
Everyone’s done the risk assessments. They’ll go over
all this and help us put our case forward for this- Mines
Rescue are the people that are going to be doing the job.
The people on the West Coast, which have always said the job
can be done and have been stopped from doing it are the ones
that are going to be doing the job.
GREG Time is of
the essence with that side of it, because a lot of those
men, of course, and gear and the expertise will be going
before too long.
BERNIE That’s the
biggest problem. That’s why the push is on to try and get
this job done before that expertise goes, because once they
leave, then we’re going to be relying on Australia again,
you know, the ones that actually designed the mine and
caused this explosion in the first place.
GREG Has the
prime minister- I know you had a meeting you described as
‘very disappointing’ with the prime minister last
October. Are you hoping for any advance from that?
BERNIE Well, I think
so. I think he’s a wise man. He got it completely wrong
when he came to see us. He’s relied on experts, and I’m
sorry, his experts blew that mine up another three times
after the first explosion, and all we’ve asked for is to
sit down with all these people and go through where they
think it’s impossible to do, and no one’s come forth.
That’s why the push has been on and it will continue to
happen till someone sits around the table. So Solid Energy
have said to us, ‘You get the proposals forward, you get
the people to do it, and we won’t stand in your way.’
And that’s what we’re going to do.
GREG Give us a
timeframe, Bernie. When does Solid Energy, when do you think
that could happen?
BERNIE Well, everyone
has told us over the years, the months and years and that,
and I’ll be very disappointed if we aren’t up within the
next month or so.
GREG That quick?
BERNIE That
quick. It’s only a two-hour walk. We’re only talking
about a walk up the drift. Let’s do a summary on the
drift, because everything up till now is speculation.
Everything. And once we take a walk up the drift, we can do
the analysis on where to go from there.
GREG You sound
like-
BERNIE
That’s how important it is.
GREG Bernie, you
sound like a man who feels pretty let down by this
government, let down by the prime minister.
BERNIE Well, I think
the prime minister has been wrongly advised by the superiors
that are in charge of this whole saga. All we’ve asked for
is dialogue, and they just shut the door on us. So if they
wanna shut the door on us, we’ll go alone.
GREG I understand
John Key isn’t coming to Greymouth in the foreseeable
future. How disappointing is that? When do you hope to get
that dialogue, get around the table with him again?
BERNIE Well, I’ve
since written to him since the meeting we had in Greymouth a
few weeks ago, and I’ve had information back that he’s
taken what I wrote very seriously, and I’m still waiting.
GREG You
said you felt that the prime minister felt that New
Zealanders had forgotten about you. Do you think that's the
case?
BERNIE I
don’t think they’ve forgotten about us. I just think,
you know, it’s a long journey, and people think that we
should move on, but what they’ve got to realise, we know,
the Coasters know, the people with the experience here know
it can be done. They haven’t got families down there. They
haven’t got members down there. And let’s face it, they
haven’t had one shot of doing anything. They’ve just
walked away from the whole situation. We’ve been given two
bankrupt companies, or one bankrupt company and one that’s
in financial difficulties to deal with, so, you know,
they’re not really interested in doing a job that’s
gotta be done, so that’s why we’ve had to go alone.
GREG
Bernie, just finally, there are a lot of corporate settings,
a lot of that type of thing still to come. Corporate
manslaughter - is that something that needs to be looked at
in the future, needs to be realistically considered?
BERNIE Oh, very much
so. There’s gotta be big law changes here. This is another
part of where the Pike families have gone. We’ve already
met with the special task force for health and safety
that’s been put forth from the government. The families
have already met them. We’ve put submissions in with that.
Listen, Pike River will be remembered from what we’re
doing, and we’re going to make sure that in 30 years’
time they’re gonna be saying, ‘These men didn’t die in
vain. They’ve left a legacy that’ll be remembered for
years.’
ENDS
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