South Africa's illegal underground gold miners being starved ...

Black_Sun

New Member
Wow... sounds like science fiction. One paragraph in this story says, "Reports of underground clashes between armed gangs and mine security officers are common in the domestic media..."

South Africa's illegal underground gold miners being starved back to surface

http://www.mineweb.com/mineweb/view/mineweb/en/page68?oid=155807&sn=Detail&pid=102055

One south African gold mining major is so concerned about safety and production threats from illegal miners it has taken the step of banning all workers from taking any food underground in order to starve out the illegals.

Author: Ed Cropley
Posted: Wednesday , 25 Jul 2012

WELKOM, SOUTH AFRICA -

One of South Africa's biggest gold firms has taken the drastic step of banning all food underground to cut supply lines to gangs of illegal miners used to staying deep in the mines for months on end, threatening lives and official production.

With gold mining around Welkom, 200 km (130 miles) south of Johannesburg, dating back to the 1930s, the bedrock is criss-crossed by a myriad network of tunnels that provide perfect cover and multiple entry points for illegal miners.

Bosses of Harmony Gold's 2.4 km deep Phakisa mine - one of the world's deepest - have tried blocking up old shafts and installing stadium-style turnstiles at the top of the main shaft to stop imposters slipping through.

In January this year, they tightened the screw by imposing a total ban on food to prevent official miners bringing in supplies to sell or give to their unofficial counterparts.

"There are two things you need to survive underground: food and water. You can always get water down a mine but the food ban has made a real difference," Harmony chief executive Graham Briggs told Reuters this week during a mine visit.

Unions agreed to the ban - as long as it was accompanied by a free meal at the end of a shift - even though it means teams of men will consume nothing but water during an eight-hour shift pounding at the gold-bearing rock in sweltering heat.

Although nobody knows the full extent of a problem that is literally hidden deep in the bowels of the earth, the countermeasures introduced by firms such as Harmony suggest the threat from illegal mining in South Africa is significant.

Once underground, the men will stay there for weeks, if not months, subsisting on food brought in from above ground.

They make a living by crushing the ore by hand and panning out the specks of gold or lighting fires beneath ad hoc smelters. In some cases they will even undertake their own drilling and blasting - at great risk to themselves and others.

Reports of underground clashes between armed gangs and mine security officers are common in the domestic media, as are accidents caused by unofficial mining activity.

In March, up to 20 men were killed after a rock fall at an abandoned gold mine near Johannesburg, and at least 10 died in May when a tunnel collapsed at a disused diamond mine.

Although mine owners are not blamed for such tragedies - and will often send in their own rescue experts to pull out victims - an aggressive "zero harm" government safety push means they cannot afford to have outsiders wandering around underground.

"There's a very big risk to safety in these mines because illegal miners could mine pillars, boundary walls and basically dismantle the structures established to ensure stability," said May Hermanus, a former chief mines inspector.

"That's very serious."

Despite the success of Harmony's food ban, the overall threat is unlikely to go away while gold is fetching $1,600 an ounce and South Africa's 25 percent unemployment rate pushes many young men to risk everything to eke out a living.

"These guys are crazy," Briggs said. "They will try and go down a vertical shaft with just a few bits of old rope." (Reporting by Ed Cropley; Editing by Ed Stoddard and Angus MacSwan)

Thomson Reuters 2012 All rights reserved
 
I have a Sth African mate who has emigrated here with his family.

He worked in a coal mine in Sth Africa where gold was also.... he told me of an albino African colleague who each and every day would rub coal dust through his hair and all over his body. When he returned home he would carefully shower in a bucket and collect the dust. He would then collect the dust and burn it in a potato over a fire.

At the end of his career, upon retirement, guess how much gold he had? He had over ten ounces. Not a bad bonus eh?

Shiny.
 
ShinyStuff said:
I have a Sth African mate who has emigrated here with his family.

He worked in a coal mine in Sth Africa where gold was also.... he told me of an albino African colleague who each and every day would rub coal dust through his hair and all over his body. When he returned home he would carefully shower in a bucket and collect the dust. He would then collect the dust and burn it in a potato over a fire.

At the end of his career, upon retirement, guess how much gold he had? He had over ten ounces. Not a bad bonus eh?

Shiny.
Is this to purify or melt into a lump?
 
thatguy said:
ShinyStuff said:
I have a Sth African mate who has emigrated here with his family.

He worked in a coal mine in Sth Africa where gold was also.... he told me of an albino African colleague who each and every day would rub coal dust through his hair and all over his body. When he returned home he would carefully shower in a bucket and collect the dust. He would then collect the dust and burn it in a potato over a fire.

At the end of his career, upon retirement, guess how much gold he had? He had over ten ounces. Not a bad bonus eh?

Shiny.
Is this to purify or melt into a lump?

I assume it was to get rid of the coal dust and leave the gold. It was pretty pure apparently.

The only reason people found out was because the mining giant sued him for theft... but the guy won as he walked out every day in full view of the management and as it was on his person, they were not allowed to get it back.
 
Eh? It most certainly is theft. The gold belongs to the company, otherwise all those fancy detectors at the exits on the Anglo gold mines or De Beers diamond mines would be for nought.
 
they didnt eliminate all the food supply the guys are just gonna change to canibalism; problem solved :)
 
Argentum said:
they didnt eliminate all the food supply the guys are just gonna change to canibalism; problem solved :)

or possibly smuggle the food in, the same way people often smuggle drugs; ie. internally, bundled up in condoms.

and when they report "underground clashes" it make you wonder, are the talking (a) guys involved in fire-fights, where they retreat deep into the mine, similar to "no go" areas in some cities for cops, or (b) full blown fire-fights, where you have 4 wheel drives mounted with machine guns, chasing after one another?
 
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