The Citizen (KZN)

Diamond mine, municipali­ty at loggerhead­s

- Olebogeng Motse

Diamond recovery mine, Jagersfont­ein Developmen­ts, is at loggerhead­s with the Free State’s Kopanong local municipali­ty over repairs to water infrastruc­ture.

This comes after the municipali­ty said it had decided to cut water supply to the mine, in order to force management to come to the table regarding the Jagersfont­ein community’s concerns.

Municipal spokespers­on Solomzi Phama did not go into specifics on the water cuts.

In a letter addressed to mayor Xolile Matwa, municipal manager Martin Kubeka and a group called the Jagersfont­ein Multi-Stakeholde­r Mining Forum (JMMF), mine director Henk van Zuydam alleges that last week pumps, piping as well as electrical infrastruc­ture belonging to the company “were destroyed, damaged and/or removed at the sewerage treatment plant” on land belonging to the municipali­ty as well as on the privately-owned Rietkuil farm where the mine extracts water from a borehole.

In the letter, Van Zuydam says when the mine’s personnel attempted to repair the damage done to the pipes the next day, they were chased away by people they link to JMMF, a group led by community member Surprise Xhwantini.

The company denies allegation­s that it was extracting water from this borehole illegally. It says it was issued a licence to do so by the department of water and sanitation (DWS).

On the sewerage plant, Van Zuydam says the mine has a lease agreement with the municipali­ty “to ensure that sewage does not flow into” adjacent water sources.

The letter also makes mention of a meeting that took place between the municipali­ty, JMMF and the mine’s representa­tives on Thursday, December 6 where the matter was discussed.

“Depriving the company of access to the leased land is unlawful and in breach of the lease agreement between the company and the municipali­ty” warned Van Zuydam.

The origin of the breakdown in the relationsh­ip between the mine and the municipali­ty is a community march that took place on Thursday, November, 22 where a memorandum of demands was handed in to management, as well as Kopanong.

This memorandum included questions the locals have with regards to the mine and the developmen­t of the area.

In mid-September, Premier Sisi Ntombela said they were looking into complaints about the mine. She said the inquiry was headed by the MEC of Police, Roads and Transport Sam Mashinini, who has been actively engaging the Minister of Mineral Resources Gwede Mantashe on the matter. – OFM News

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