Sunday Times

From gold town to ghost town

Residents left in the lurch when mine was closed

- DINEO TSAMELA

BLYVOORUIT­ZICHT, a once prosperous mine town, has become a haven for criminals.

Residents fear for their lives following the closure of the town’s gold mine in 2013.

On Friday Lawyers for Human Rights released a report on Blyvooruit­zicht focusing on the “human toll of state and corporate abdication of responsibi­lity in South Africa”.

According to Pule Molefe, a member of the Blyvooruit­zicht Residents Committee, the hazards in the town include toxic water, thick mine dust, scrapmetal vandals and gangs of illegal miners.

Blyvooruit­zicht mine shut down in 2013 after running into financial trouble. At the time it was a subsidiary of DRD Gold but was acquired by Randlords Capital in December 2014.

Since the mine was closed no one has come to its assistance, said Molefe. He hoped that the release of the report would pave the way for some help for Blyvooruit­zicht’s residents.

“We hope that after this stage, something will be done, that our local municipali­ty and all the other stakeholde­rs will come to the party and listen to our cries,” he said.

The report detailed the impact closing the mine has had on residents and the environmen­t. It focused on the residents’ rights to developmen­t, a healthy environmen­t and adequate housing.

Findings from the report said that about 60% of the people interviewe­d struggled to put food on the table for their families and send their children to school.

Residents also suffered from the effects of radioactiv­e dust, with one of them — Deborah Thompson — saying it could sometimes be like a fog. Constant exposure had caused her frequent migraines, she said.

This was something that Thompson said was likely to happen to other towns if the Department of Mineral Resources turned a blind eye and sided with the mining companies.

Thompson said only a few houses in the town had running water.

She said residents had to use buckets, pots and other containers to collect water from the nearest house with running water — and the water was contaminat­ed.

“We boil the water just to be careful, but we know that doesn’t help,” she said. “We drink it anyway because what else can we do?”

Michael Clements, a representa­tive of Lawyers for Human Rights, said she hoped that the report would be the beginning of dialogue with the various stakeholde­rs involved. NO FRILLS: Residents of the Blyvooruit­zicht mining town near Carletonvi­lle now try to make ends meet by selling vegetables and doing sewing. Many have been left without an income and crime is flourishin­g. Below, people have occupied abandoned buildings

“While it’s important in and of itself because it tells the story of the residents of Blyvooruit­zicht for the first time in their own words,” she said. “We see it as the beginning of an advocacy process that we see continuing over the next few months, perhaps years.”

The residents are fighting for basic access to sanitation, clean water and electricit­y. It is an issue with which the residents say former owner DRD Gold and the Department of Mineral Re- sources seem to be unwilling to engage. DRD Gold referred questions to subsidiary Blyvoor Gold, which could not be reached for comment.

The department had not responded to a request for comment by the time of going to print.

Mamokgethi Molopyane, a labour and mining analyst, said Blyvooruit­zicht’s condition was a symptom of a well-entrenched trend in the mining sector.

Molopyane said mining companies had always been able to get away with “many wrongs”.

She said this stemmed from the era when mining was a large industry that contribute­d sig- nificantly to the economy. This allowed it to be excused for its wrongs, she said.

Molopyane said that a contributi­ng factor to the lack of government commitment to enforcing legislatio­n applicable to the mining sector was a result of direct or indirect interests that stakeholde­rs within the government agencies had in mining activities.

“Some of the people leading the state in terms of policies happen to be playing both sides and often are left with the dilemma of how they are going to correct themselves,” she said.

Molopyane said it was unacceptab­le that after so many years, the government still did not have a process in place to deal with the impact of closed mines.

“It’s been 22 years. Surely there has to be a model that reflects on mine closures and builds case studies to try and avoid the same problems in another area,” she said.

Blyvooruit­zicht mine, which went bust under controvers­ial circumstan­ces, applied for liquidatio­n in 2013. It has yet to apply for a certificat­e of closure for the mine.

Mariette Liefferink, CEO of the Federation for a Sustainabl­e Environmen­t, said Blyvooruit­zicht Gold, which owned the mine, had set aside a R44-million fund to assist the community.

However, this money might not be used for that purpose because the company’s creditors take priority during the liquidatio­n process. Eskom is a significan­t creditor.

Liefferink said the organisati­on had laid criminal complaints with the police in 2013. The complaints, implicatin­g the directors of Blyvooruit­zicht Gold, were endorsed by the Department of Environmen­tal Affairs. There has been no decision on whether to prosecute.

The Randlords Group is seeking to expedite the liquidatio­n because this would result in the mining right lapsing and would absolve the company from any responsibi­lity.

Liefferink said: “This means they will have to reapply [for the mining rights] and that could take another 300 days. There have been two requests for de- lays and they have been granted by the court.” But there could not be more delays, she said, because without liquidatio­n none of the legal actions taken against Blyvoor Gold could be implemente­d.

Liefferink said the Department of Mineral Resources had failed the environmen­t, neighbouri­ng mines — which were carrying the cost of pumping and treating the mine water — the communitie­s and municipali­ty.

We boil the water just to be careful, but we know that doesn’t help People leading the state happen to be playing both sides

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 ?? Pictures: WALDO SWIEGERS ??
Pictures: WALDO SWIEGERS
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