NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Miners body urges govt to formalise gold panning

- BY STEPHEN CHADENGA

CONFEDERAT­ION of Zimbabwe Miners (CZM) president Rangani Chauke has called on government to urgently regularise the operations of artisanal miners to avoid disasters and integrate the sector into the mainstream economy.

Chauke’s call came in the wake of a rise in the number of fatal accidents involving gold panners in disused mines shafts.

Cases of trapped artisanal miners were on the rise with 30 illegal miners feared dead after a shaft from which they were panning gave in at Ran Mine in Bindura recently. “As miners’ bodies, we have always reiterated that the formalisat­ion of artisanal miners is a matter of urgency to avoid the unnecessar­y loss of lives,” Chauke said in an interview yesterday.

“Regularisa­tion of the sector would not only improve safety of miners, but would decriminal­ise the activity.

“That is why we have always said the Mines and Minerals Bill should address the formalisat­ion of the sector.”

He said, despite contributi­ng immensely to gold production in the country, artisanal mining continued to be a dangerous enterprise claiming many lives every year.

Chauke said there was need to bring legality and stability to the sector to avoid negative consequenc­es associated with artisanal mining.

“There is need for laws and support from government on the legal and policy frameworks that ensure safety and good standards in the formalisat­ion process,” he said.

CZM is an associatio­n of small-scale-miners.

In recent years, artisanal miners have resorted to mining in decommissi­oned mine shafts. Government continues to dither on plans to regularise artisanal mining.

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