The Citizen (KZN)

Recovery bid for miners

- Sinesipho Schrieber

Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union president Joseph Mathunjwa says if the miners who took it upon themselves to try and retrieve the bodies of the three miners trapped undergroun­d for three years in the Lily gold mine in Mpumalanga were to die, it would be on the government’s conscience.

After a three-year deadlock, former colleagues went undergroun­d yesterday in the hope of bring closure to their families.

Mathunjwa said the government had the financial and technical means to retrieve Pretty Nkambule, Solomon Nyarenda and Yvonne Mnisi but had decided to fold arms as the more than 30 miners risked their lives.

“The mine is not safe...” he said. “Government has the fullest power, they can stop the operation ... by taking the responsibi­lity to do it themselves.

“The miners have sought to risk their own lives because the government has failed to plunge money in the retrieval operations of the three miners. It is the worst disaster” said Mathunjwa.

He said they had conducted a health and safety inquiry which found the mine was not safe. The government was responsibl­e for ensuring the mining company complied with health and safety measures but had failed.

He questioned the role of National Prosecutin­g Authority for not arresting the Lily gold mine directors for their failure to retrieve the miners.

The department of mineral resources and energy said it was concerned by reports that miners had kick-started the retrieval operations themselves. The operations posed a serious danger to the miners due to poor standard of the structures used in the operation.

Department spokespers­on Ayanda Shezi said: “The department, working together with the families of the deceased, community leaders and members, and all relevant law enforcemen­t agencies, will be attending to this matter urgently.

“Regarding the business rescue [of Lily], the department is facilitati­ng talks with parties interested in acquiring the mine ... with the primary objective of having an amicable resolution to the impasse that is causing unnecessar­y delays for the mine to restart operations.”

In February 2016, a metal container on which the three miners were working fell into a sinkhole and was buried by thousands of tons of rock. The company was subsequent­ly put into liquidatio­n by Vantage Goldfields.

Government has failed to plunge money in the retrieval operations.

Joseph Mathunjwa Associatio­n of Mineworker­s and Constructi­on Union

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