Business Day

Mines recall 9,500 foreign nationals

• Covid-19 protocols are making it an arduous process

- Allan Seccombe Resources Writer seccombea@businessli­ve.co.za

SA’s mines are bringing back 9,500 employees from neighbouri­ng countries as operations slowly ramp back to full production with about half the workforce back at operations. An estimated 45,000 foreign nationals work on SA’s mines out of a total workforce of 450,000 people.

SA’s mines are bringing back 9,500 employees in neighbouri­ng countries as operations slowly ramp back to full production, with about half the workforce back at operations.

An estimated 45,000 foreign nationals work on SA’s mines out of a total workforce of 450,000, which has been called back to work after the economy was shut down late in March when the government implemente­d a strict lockdown to curtail the spread of the coronaviru­s.

So far, about half the workforce, more than 227,000 people, have been screened daily as employees are recalled, with 7,461 tests conducted and 527 positive cases detected. So far there have been 72 recoveries and no deaths.

The number of screenings show that the industry is nowhere near a full return to operations. The cost of the lockdown in lost production and salaries paid during the period is estimated to be about R100bn.

The entire industry was given the green light to return to full operations on April 16 by mineral resources & energy minister Gwede Mantashe, but the mines, particular­ly the large undergroun­d gold and platinum mines, are taking a cautious, phased approach to reaching steady-state production.

The risks are high if too many employees return too quickly and strict adherence to safety protocols is not followed.

At AngloGold Ashanti’s Mponeng mine, the testing of 650 employees resulted in a third proving positive for the virus, prompting the company to close the world’s deepest mine. Those testing positive were all asymptomat­ic.

The asymptomat­ic nature of so many of the positive tests is a “big headache” for the industry, which relies heavily on screening as the first line of defence to stopping the virus spreading at mines, said Thuthula Balfour, head of health at the Minerals Council SA.

Screening involves the taking of temperatur­es and answering a detailed questionna­ire, none of which will flag a miner who is asymptomat­ic, meaning they are able to go to work, potentiall­y infecting their colleagues.

“Up to 40% of people with Covid-19 can be asymptomat­ic. That’s what we’re finding; very large numbers of people are asymptomat­ic,” she said. “It’ sa big problem.”

Balfour said the screening is not 100% effective.

“Those who are asymptomat­ic have gone through screening but it doesn’t pick up the disease. The people who have been asymptomat­ic, we’ve not heard that they’ve become symptomati­c and progressed to a severe disease.”

The return of 9,500 foreigners will entail a three-month process to screen them in their home countries, transport them across borders, then into strict quarantine in SA before they are allowed back onto the mines, said Minerals Council SA’s health and environmen­t executive Niks Lesufi.

The council, a body that promotes and protects the interests of its members, could not say how many of the 45,000 foreigners had returned home or had opted to remain in SA.

Companies will pick up the costs of each employee returning from neighbouri­ng countries, which include Mozambique, Zimbabwe, Lesotho, Swaziland, countries in which mineworker services and recruitmen­t agency TEBA has offices. TEBA will play a big role in the initial screenings in along with health authoritie­s in those countries, and organising transport to the quarantine sites in SA, which are mostly converted hostels mining firms have prepared for this purpose.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Safety protocols: A mine worker wearing a face mask boards a bus ahead of his shift, amid the nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown, at a SibanyeSti­llwater mine in Carletonvi­lle on May 19 2020.
/Reuters Safety protocols: A mine worker wearing a face mask boards a bus ahead of his shift, amid the nationwide coronaviru­s lockdown, at a SibanyeSti­llwater mine in Carletonvi­lle on May 19 2020.

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