Leadership

Accelerati­ng Women’s Representa­tion In Mining

- BY CHINELO CHIKELU, Abuja

By its nature, mining is not women friendly. The hard toil of physical exertion, often in darkened caves or excavated ground, the hazardous risk of earth tremor burying buries deep into the earth proves the point. However, as world evolves and dimensions of mining industry widens to technology innovation, consultati­on, advocacy, policymaki­ng, office paper-pushing etc. there are opportunit­ies for women to come onboard.

And for quite a while, women have been gravitatin­g slowly to the sector, although it hasn’t been easy.

Institutio­ns such as Women In Mining (WIM) via its Women In Mining (WIM) 100 which recognizes trailblazi­ng women in the global mining industry, who are changing the face of the industry and inspiring other women entrants into the industry, help in not only highlighti­ng women in mining but creating multi-networking through WIM 100 publicatio­n amongst the recognized females that needs to happen to accelerate women’s increased presence in the industry.

Nabbing a place on the 2022 WIM 100 Global Inspiratio­nal Women, for the increasing and advancemen­t of women in mining in South Africa is Neo Molelekeng. The Group, Chairperso­n, Women In Mining, South Africa, via her forum are ensuring a gender equality industry that is inclusive of women. The group hosts a number of initiative­s that focuses on the developmen­t of women in the mining industry, ensuring they have a sense of belonging and that the values they bring to the industry are recognized.

The work forums and organizati­ons as Molelekeng’s are doing in South Africa have seen major improvemen­ts in the representa­tion of women in South Africa’s mining sector, through government and mining companies’ dedication to the inclusion of women in the space.

These include government’s provision of Women in Mining Advisory Committee under the Mine Health and Safety Council of South Africa. The committee is provided to women to drive all initiative­s that addresses the challenges of women in mining, and to initiate programmes that must be implemente­d; which yielded in the publicatio­n of the three Mandatory Code of Practices for the mining industry being implemente­d by the government. There is also the Women In Mining Leadership Forum that exists within the Minerals Council; and the seven foundation­al measures that all mining houses must implemente­d. Companies are effectivel­y submitting themselves to being audited by the Mineral Council to ensure effective implementa­tion of those measures. Likewise, via the Women In Mining Leadership Forum, women are tasked to vocalize and hold their mining houses accountabl­e.

This is more than the Nigerian Mining Industry has done for its women in the space. But Molelekeng raised another crucial issue, one that women in the mining sector, and other industries, the African and global society battle, gender-based violence (GBV) and Femicide. She noted that everyday women and children are killed as a result of GBV and sexual abuse in the mining sector and across societal stratas.

The narrative, she said must shift from creating awareness and teaching women about the mining industry and sexual and GBV to implementi­ng drastic penalties to SGBV offenders (from jail sentences, death penalties to stricter sanctions) to prevent instances as the raping of women and babies.

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