Sunday Times

Uproar over ‘bantus’ moving in on West Coast hamlet

- SHANAAZ EGGINGTON

A SMALLWest Coast town is in an uproar over a new mine in the area, with townsfolk at loggerhead­s about what it will mean for the quiet country life of Hopefield.

Lizelle Strydom, head of tourism for the region, was forced to resign after she refused to retract her claim that the developmen­t on a farm between Hopefield and Langebaan would attract black people.

“We have no squatter camps here, but when the mine comes, the bantus will come,” she said.

This week, Strydom, who uses a picture of the old South African flag as her Facebook profile picture, said she did not regret her opposition to the project. “I won’t apologise. Mining will destroy the culture of the West Coast.”

Another fierce opponent, hotel owner Jacques van der Westhuizen, said he would rather continue struggling to sell wine and local beer to tourists than get rich selling quarts of Black Label to miners.

He said the phosphorou­s mine would threaten his “constituti­onal right to live the lifestyle of our choice”.

But those who support the mine on Elandsfont­ein Farm said the R1-billion investment was needed and would create about 400 jobs for locals.

Shandré Summers, the manager of theWest Coast Business Developmen­t Centre, said most Hopefield residents were ecstatic about the mine. “They always feel left out of big developmen­ts in the region and the mine is going to create much-needed jobs,” he said.

One of the new recruits, Henry Skippers, 71, said he welcomed the mine. “For years I had to go and work in Cape Town, far from my home. I’m glad I found work here.”

He said the farmers were complainin­g, but they did not create work for the residents.

“Most of them aren’t really farmers either, they just own farms and come have holidays.”

But wealthy residents question the financial benefits and have raised concerns about the environmen­tal impact on the fynbos and the West Coast National Park, home to world-famous fossil finds and visited by more 200 000 tourists a year. Elandsfont­ein borders the park.

The project got the go-ahead from the Department of Mineral Resources on January 30.

Last month, Heritage Western Cape issued a stop works order over concerns about the protection of archaeolog­ical remains and fossils that the mine ignored. On Friday, Andrew Hall, the heritage body’s CEO, said a draft memorandum of agreement had been reached between the parties.

A group of concerned citizens started a Facebook page, “No Mining in Elandsfont­ein West Coast National Park Buffer”, and there is an online petition driven by conservati­onist Carika van Zyl and environmen­tal activist Pieter Stegmann.

In it they appeal to the Department of Mineral Resources to investigat­e the way the mining rights were granted to Elandsfont­ein Exploratio­n and Mining. They claim the company did not follow procedure or adhere to legislatio­n.

Van Zyl said the access road was being constructe­d on municipal property on which endangered Hopefield sand fynbos flourished. “No research was done on small animals such as tortoises and lizards … We did not see any environmen­tal control officer on site during the bulldozing,” Van Zyl said.

The mining company denied this and said the department had accepted its environmen­tal management plan.

Wynand van Dyk, who has been appointed as the project manager for the mine, said the business would be handled in a “sustainabl­e, responsibl­e way”.

“I understand the fears of the locals. But it is all unfounded. We are not going to damage the biodiversi­ty of the site.”

 ?? Picture: ESA ALEXANDER ?? NO SAYING SORRY: Former tourism officer Lizelle Strydom at the mine that borders West Coast National Park near Hopefield
Picture: ESA ALEXANDER NO SAYING SORRY: Former tourism officer Lizelle Strydom at the mine that borders West Coast National Park near Hopefield

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