Coffee saves workers from death a week after the rubble in South Korea

Coffee saves workers from death a week after the rubble in South Korea

Coffee is known for its capacity to elevate mood and increase attention before a long workday, but it has now accomplished something new by causing two people to starve for more than a week without any food items under the wreckage of a mine in South Korea.
The Korean Civil Defense Forces reportedly rescued two men in their fifth and sixth decades on Friday after they had been trapped beneath the rubble for six days without nourishment, according to the British Guardian newspaper.

They were extracted from a depth of 196 metres below earth, according to the Korean News Agency, without being lost.
The two men were working in a small tent of great cold, according to one of the civil defence officers, while sustaining themselves on coffee and some water.
The daughter of one of the workers claims that when he left his eyes to adjust to darkness, he was unable to get to know her.

While the son of the other employee claims that he informed his father that he had become a superstar after he came out.
The news comes after a tragedy that occurred in South Korea as a result of the loss of more than 100 people with a collision at a Halloween party. The Korean President expressed his satisfaction at the workers’ peaceful exit through a post on social media.

In South Korea, a week after the devastation, coffee prevents workers from dying.

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