South African police end mine rescue operation with at least 78 dead and
246 survivors
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[January 16, 2025]
By MOGOMOTSI MAGOME and GERALD IMRAY
STILFONTEIN, South Africa (AP) — South African police ended a rescue
operation at an abandoned gold mine on Wednesday and said they believe
they have brought out all the survivors and retrieved all the bodies
after hundreds of miners were trapped for months in one of the country's
deepest mines while working illegally.
At least 78 miners were confirmed dead, police said, and 246 survivors
had been rescued. The victims were suspected to have died of starvation
or dehydration, civic groups said, although no cause of death has been
released for any of them.
The death toll is likely higher, as a community group reported
retrieving nine bodies before the police operation started. There have
also been reports of an unconfirmed number of bodies and survivors being
brought out sporadically during other community-led rescue efforts since
last year.
The surprise announcement ending the operation came a day after the
police minister said it would likely last until at least next week.
Rescuers would do a final sweep of the mine on Thursday, said Maj.-Gen.
Patrick Asaneng, the acting police commissioner for North West province.
The announcement brought a sudden end to a disaster that has focused
criticism on the South African government’s decision last year to try to
force out the miners by cutting off their food and other supplies.
Civic groups say the government's refusal to stage a rescue sooner
effectively left the miners to die of starvation or dehydration. It was
unclear exactly how long the miners were underground for, but Asaneng
said some of them had been in the mine since August. Relatives said
others had been there since July.
Some of the survivors were badly emaciated and barely able to walk and
had to be helped into ambulances. All of them would be arrested and
charged with illegal mining and trespassing, police said.
South Africa's second biggest political party, which is part of a
government coalition, has called for an independent inquiry to find out
“why the situation was allowed to get so badly out of hand.”
Court orders authorities to rescue the miners
Authorities launched the rescue effort on Monday in response to a court
order last week ordering them to do so.
A specialist mining rescue company had been dropping a small cage
thousands of meters down a shaft to retrieve survivors and bodies. But
no personnel from the company went down because they considered it too
dangerous — instead two community volunteers were in the cage to help
the miners out.
Those two volunteers had searched underground Wednesday and reported
there were no more bodies or survivors, Asaneng said.
However, Mzukisi Jam, a spokesperson for the South African National
Civics Organisation, said that there were more bodies at another shaft
and demanded to know what was going to happen with them. “What are we
going to tell the relatives?” he said on TV station Newzroom Afrika.
The mine is 2.5 kilometers (1.5 miles) deep with multiple shafts, many
levels and a maze of tunnels. Another civic group had estimated that
more than 500 miners were underground when the rescue started. Police
brought out 324 bodies and survivors in total.
Standoff at the mine
The closed Buffelsfontein Gold Mine was the scene of a standoff in
November when police tried to force the miners out by cutting off their
supplies for a period of time.
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Illegal miners escorted by police officers after being rescued from
an abandoned gold mine in Stilfontein, South Africa, Tuesday, Jan.
14, 2025. (AP Photo/Themba Hadebe)
A court ruled that authorities had to allow supplies in — but civic
groups argued that officials needed to do more because the miners
still weren't getting enough food and water and the situation was
becoming dire.
South African authorities have said that the miners were able to
exit through another shaft, but some refused because they feared
being arrested. Activists said that escaping for most would involve
a dangerous trek underground, and many were too weak or ill after
months underground with little food and water.
Police have said they were carrying out their mandate to “combat
criminality” and said they seized gold, explosives, firearms and
more than $2 million in cash from the miners. They said the vast
majority were foreign nationals from Mozambique, Zimbabwe and
Lesotho and in South Africa illegally.
Video from underground
One of the civic groups representing the miners released two videos
over the weekend showing what it said were the dire conditions
underground. The videos were on a cellphone carried out of the mine
by one of the miners, the group said, along with a note urging
people to watch them.
In them, dozens of what appear to be dead bodies can be seen lined
up in a darkened cavern and wrapped in plastic. The man filming says
they are dying and begs for authorities to send them food and get
them out.
‘Smoke them out’ tactics
Authorities are particularly under fire for their tactics last year,
when they cut off food and other supplies to the miners for a period
of time. It was an attempt to “smoke them out,” a South African
Cabinet minister said, adding that authorities would not help the
miners because they were “criminals.”
Rights groups condemned the plan and South Africa's second largest
trade union federation called it “one of the most horrific displays
of state willful negligence in recent history.”
But while anger is high in the local community, the tragedy has not
stoked a strong reaction across South Africa, where illegal mining
is often in the news.
The practice is common at mines that companies have closed because
they are no longer profitable, leaving groups of informal miners to
enter in a search for leftover deposits. South Africa has an
estimated 6,000 abandoned mines, and authorities said more than
1,500 people had been arrested for illegal mining in the Stilfontein
area since last August.
The South African government has taken a hard-line approach to the
miners — called "zama zamas" in the Zulu language, which roughly
translates as "hustlers" or “chancers.” They are often armed and
part of criminal syndicates, the government says, and rob South
Africa of more than $1 billion a year in gold.
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Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa.
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