Sunday Times

Arrests revive Aurora spectre

Blyvooruit­zicht mine boss to face music after 1.3kg gold find

- LONI PRINSLOO and JANA MARAIS

THE scandal brewing at troubled Blyvooruit­zicht mine deepened on Friday with the arrest of the mine manager after 1.3kg of gold was found at his house near Carletonvi­lle.

Blyvooruit­zicht is one of the oldest gold mines on the West Rand. Like many mines on the Reef, it fell on hard times when reserves ran out.

It went into liquidatio­n last year, but problems arose when the liquidator, Leigh Roering, accepted a R70-million bid from Goldrich, a company run by the controvers­ial directors of the failed Aurora mining company.

Miners told of their fears that Blyvooruit­zicht would be subject to an Aurora-style stripping exercise with mine equipment sold off and workers sacked. Those fears were probably stoked further by Friday’s arrest of Ettieen Erasmus in connection with charges of theft, illegal possession of gold nuggets, fraud and defeating the ends of justice.

Hawks spokesman Captain Paul Ramaloko said on Friday that Erasmus went by the name of Morne Nortje. He had been arrested, and his laptop, cellphones and documents were seized, said Ramaloko.

The 1.3kg of gold is understood to have been 80% pure, and could have fetched R500 000 at current market prices.

Sarel Barkhuizen, the manager at Blyvooruit­zicht’s smelter plant, was also arrested.

Sources close to the investigat­ion said they suspected Erasmus sold mine equipment and scrap metal on behalf of somebody else — possibly the new owners, Goldrich, which is run by former Aurora director Thulani Ngubane and his adviser, Faizel Bhana.

Ramaloko said Erasmus and Barkhuizen would appear in court tomorrow. Erasmus could not be reached by the time of going to print.

Barkhuizen’s contact details could not be establishe­d.

However, Ngubane and Bhana were adamant that no gold had left Blyvooruit­zicht on their instructio­n at any time since Goldrich took control of the mine, describing the claims as “ludicrous”.

“We categorica­lly deny any such allegation­s, and repudiate same with the contempt it deserves,” they said.

The Aurora case is one of the biggest mining scandals in recent years.

In 2009, Aurora bought old Pamodzi mines Grootvlei and Orkney, promising to revive mining.

However, both mines were left bare while promises to pay liquidator­s and workers were never honoured.

Pamodzi’s liquidator­s are still trying to recover more than R120-million in lost gold sales and more than R1.5billion in damage to assets.

We deny any such allegation­s and repudiate same with the contempt it deserves

The influentia­l Bhana family is facing lawsuits and claims for the millions it received from Aurora directors while the mines were basically insolvent.

The wealthy family was previously also involved in the liquidated Velvet Sky. In 2002, the family was ordered to pay huge fines relating to insider trading at oil products company Amlac.

Investigat­ors working for rival mining groups said they suspected tactics similar to Aurora’s were being applied at Blyvooruit­zicht, and that Erasmus was taking the fall for others.

Goldrich was meant to pay the liquidator­s R70-million in instalment­s for Blyvoor, but last week missed the payment deadline for the latest R13million payment as well as R2.4-mil- lion it was meant to pay workers.

Richard Xati, who represents the National Union of Mineworker­s at the mine, said that despite big promises workers had not been paid.

“When we phone the liquidator, no one answers or returns our calls. We don’t know what is going on,” he said.

“Workers have been without money for six months now . . . they cannot survive.”

Goldrich’s Ngubane claimed, however, that miners had been paid their salaries for February in full.

While the discovery of gold at the mine manager’s house raises new questions, the police organised crime unit is investigat­ing another case of gold theft.

That case involves a break-in at the mine in January when 380kg of gold- bearing material was stolen.

The ore was found the next day on a farm at De Deur, about 80km away. At the farm, police found old-time goldproces­sing equipment, including oldfashion­ed gold-sorting machinery They also confiscate­d a handgun and R40 000 in cash.

Five suspects were arrested. It is understood that the suspects and the farm owner were investigat­ed in 2003 for illegal gold mining.

Private investigat­ors who are understood to be assisting the police, believe there is a strong link to the current case against Erasmus.

Most gold mined in South Africa is processed at Rand Refinery, but that company has strict rules obliging it to ascertain the identity of the people who bring it ore.

After processing, however, it is almost impossible to distinguis­h between gold that was obtained legally and gold that was mined illegally.

Rand Refinery CEO Howard Craig said that the last time it received material from Blyvooruit­zicht mine was on August 16, when the mine went into liquidatio­n.

 ??  ?? HARD TIMES: Fears are mounting that Blyvooruit­zicht mine in Carletonvi­lle, west of Johannesbu­rg, will be stripped bare during its liquidatio­n process, leaving its workers in the lurch
HARD TIMES: Fears are mounting that Blyvooruit­zicht mine in Carletonvi­lle, west of Johannesbu­rg, will be stripped bare during its liquidatio­n process, leaving its workers in the lurch
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