The Borneo Post (Sabah)

All 955 trapped gold miners resurface unharmed

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THEUNISSEN, Afrique du Sud: All 955 gold miners who were trapped undergroun­d for more than a day in South Africa following a power cut resurfaced unharmed yesterday, the mine’s owner Sibanye Gold said.

“Everybody’s out,” mine spokesman James Wellsted told AFP, adding that there were “cases of dehydratio­n and high blood pressure but nothing serious”.

The miners were stuck in the Beatrix gold mine, in the small town of Theunissen near the city of Welkom, for around 30 hours after a massive power outage caused by a storm prevented lifts from bringing workers on the night shift to the surface.

After several hours engineers were able to restore power, allowing the hoist to bring up the miners – who had been trapped since Wednesday evening – in batches.

The workers were all brought to the surface within two hours.

“It was stressful, there was not enough ventilatio­n,” said mineworker Mike Khonto.

“Thankfully our management managed to send us food and water.”

Asked if there had been any casualties, Wellsted said there was “no indication so far that anyone has been in distress” although it had been a “traumatic experience”.

Several ambulances arrived onsite overnight, said AFP reporter at the scene.

At sunrise, the workers left by bus after undergoing medical check-ups.

Nervous family members had earlier gathered along the road to the shaft, kept at a distance by security guards as they waited for news.

The accident at Beatrix mine in Free State province, 290 kilometres southwest of

It was stressful, there was not enough ventilatio­n. Thankfully our management managed to send us food and water.

Johannesbu­rg, has reignited safety concerns at South African mines.

The National Union of Mineworker­s (NUM) has called on mineworker­s to refuse to work in “dangerous conditions”.

“Major multinatio­nal corporatio­ns like Sib any eS till water which should be industry leaders in creating a safety culture are doing far too little to prevent accidents,” the union said in a statement overnight.

A parliament­ary committee on mining expressed outrage at the incident, calling for “drastic” action against the mining company.

It blasted as “utterly unacceptab­le” that the mine had no backup plan to bring the workers to the surface.

Last August five mineworker­s died after sections of a gold mine collapsed outside Johannesbu­rg. The country possesses rich mineral reserves and has some of the world’s deepest gold mines.

Gold was for many decades the backbone of South Africa’s economy, but production has declined sharply due to depletion of reserves. —

Mike Khonto, mineworker

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 ?? AFP photo ?? A bus transports some of the hundreds of miners rescued from the Beatrix gold mine shaft number 3 where nearly 1,000 miners were trapped undergroun­d following a power outage, in Theunissen. —
AFP photo A bus transports some of the hundreds of miners rescued from the Beatrix gold mine shaft number 3 where nearly 1,000 miners were trapped undergroun­d following a power outage, in Theunissen. —
 ?? AFP photo ?? This general view shows the Beatrix gold mine shaft number 3 where nearly 1,000 miners were trapped undergroun­d following a power outage, in Theunissen. —
AFP photo This general view shows the Beatrix gold mine shaft number 3 where nearly 1,000 miners were trapped undergroun­d following a power outage, in Theunissen. —

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