Jamaica Gleaner

More than 70 dead after unregulate­d gold mine collapses

-

AN OFFICIAL in Mali says more than 70 people are dead after an unregulate­d gold mine collapsed late last week, and a search continues amid fears the toll could rise.

Karim Berthé, a senior official at the government’s National Geology and Mining Directorat­e, confirmed the details to The Associated Press (AP) on Wednesday and called it an accident.

It was not immediatel­y clear what caused the collapse that occurred on Friday and was reported on Tuesday in a Ministry of Mines statement that estimated “several” miners dead. The collapse occurred in Kangaba district in the southweste­rn Koulikoro region.

Such accidents are common in Mali, Africa’s third-largest gold producer. Artisanal miners – small-scale, informal ones – are often accused of ignoring safety measures, especially in remote areas.

“The state must bring order to this artisanal mining sector to avoid these kinds of accidents in the future,” Berthé said.

The Ministry of Mines statement “deeply regretted” the collapse and urged miners as well as communitie­s living near mining sites to “comply with safety requiremen­ts”.

In recent years, there have been concerns that profits from unregulate­d mining in northern Mali could benefit Islamic extremists active in that part of the country.

The region of this latest collapse, however, is far to the south of that and closer to the capital, Bamako.

“Gold is by far Mali’s most important export, comprising more than 80 per cent of total exports in 2021,” according to the Internatio­nal Trade Administra­tion with the US Department of Commerce. It says more than two million people, or over 10 per cent of Mali’s population, depend on the mining sector for income.

The Ministry of Mines has estimated that the country has 800 tons in gold deposits.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica