Reports from industry leaders reveal a staggering reality: over 6,000 abandoned gold mines and shafts permeate the country, each a potential site for disaster akin to what recently transpired in Stilfontein.
Busi Thabane, the general manager of the Bench-Marks Foundation, a watchdog that monitors resource firms, warned that the situation is dire. “This is a big problem,” Thabane said.
James Wellsted, the spokesperson for Sibanye-Stillwater, one of South Africa’s largest gold producers, paints a stark picture of the challenges posed by illegal mining.
“Poor economic growth and low investment, high levels of unemployment, significant poverty, crime and corruption, and ineffective state organs” create a fertile ground for these criminal enterprises to flourish, Wellsted said.
The plight of illegal miners extends beyond disused mines like Stilfontein; Wellsted said that active mines…