Business Day

Toxic mines poison communitie­s long after they have shut

- ● Kippenberg is an associate director with Human Rights Watch. Juliane Kippenberg

CHILDREN’S HOMES, SCHOOLS AND PLAY AREAS ARE HIGHLY CONTAMINAT­ED, RESULTING IN EXTREMELY HIGH LEVELS OF LEAD IN THEIR BLOOD.

Henry is thin and small for his age. The 10year-old, his mum and I are sitting outside in the dusty, poor township of Waya in the Zambian city of Kabwe on a hot, dry afternoon.

His mum, looking weary, describes their life near the city’s former lead and zinc mine. She worries about her children’s health and tells Henry and his siblings to avoid the dust that blows over from there.

A few years ago, Henry was found to have extremely high amounts of lead in his blood, high enough to warrant immediate treatment, according to medical experts. But he never received any medical care.

Kabwe’s mine dates to the colonial period: a British company opened the mine in 1904. Anglo American took over in 1925 and remained in charge for nearly 50 years. Early on, doctor’s certificat­es revealed that smelter workers experience­d lead poisoning, but the company continued to mine, smelt and poison the environmen­t.

In 1974, Zambia nationalis­ed the mine and closed it 20 years later. A comprehens­ive cleanup was never undertaken. The government subsequent­ly issued several licences for companies to mine the site, allowing them to further harm people and the environmen­t.

And so, 25 years after the mine closed, children’s homes, schools and play areas are highly contaminat­ed, resulting in extremely high levels of lead in their blood.

More than 6-million tons of mining waste remain in place, and dust from these uncovered waste dumps blows over nearby residentia­l areas.

About half of the children living in the affected neighbourh­oods need medical treatment, experts say. Lead can cause stunted growth, anaemia, learning difficulti­es, organ damage, coma and convulsion­s, and even death. Children are particular­ly vulnerable.

When Human Rights Watch visited Kabwe in 2018 public health facilities had no kits for lead testing, nor any medicine. Many residents said they felt fearful, and helpless. “You see dust is everywhere. It is all over. So, this lead just can’t stop spreading,” Henry’s mother told me.

The Zambian government has issued a large-scale mining licence to British company Berkeley Mineral Resources (BMR), which is planning to reprocess lead, zinc and vanadium from the mine’s waste in a joint business venture with SA company Jubilee Metals.

Human Rights Watch wrote to both companies asking what they were doing to prevent harm; BMR referred us to Jubilee Metals, and Jubilee did not respond. An environmen­tal impact assessment submitted by a BMR subsidiary in 2015 was grossly insufficie­nt, according to experts consulted by Human Rights Watch. It lacked vital informatio­n and failed to demonstrat­e how the new venture would protect the community.

The government recently said it will require a new environmen­tal and social impact assessment. It is responsibl­e for ensuring that any waste-reprocessi­ng activities comply with Zambia’s environmen­tal laws and are scrutinise­d for harmful human rights and environmen­tal consequenc­es.

The government has also issued a few licences for small-scale mining in Kabwe. Such mining in leadcontam­inated soil carries huge health risks for miners’ families and the wider community as it produces more dust, and workers carry dust home.

So far, efforts by the government to clean up residentia­l areas and test and treat children have been insufficie­nt; even the World Bank, which funded the efforts a decade ago, has acknowledg­ed problems.

A new World Bank-funded project began in December 2016. After a slow start, testing and treatment are to be made available in the coming months, which should bring relief to the families of Henry and many others. There are also plans to clean up homes and possibly schools.

But this new effort is not the proper, lasting, and comprehens­ive cleanup Kabwe needs. That would include the former mine — the source of the contaminat­ion — as well as roads, schools, and all homes and public places nearby. The government told Human Rights Watch it does not have the resources.

UK law firm Leigh Day is preparing a class-action case against Anglo American SA on behalf of people from communitie­s near Kabwe who suffer from lead exposure. Leigh Day and its SA partner attorneys are seeking compensati­on.

Win or lose, the case is a powerful reminder that the Kabwe legacy and the children who are still being poisoned as a result can no longer be ignored.

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