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Stilfontein death toll hits 36 as emaciated miners come to surface

South African Police Service (SAPS) officers record the details of illegal miners rescued from an abandoned gold mine in Stilfontein on January 14, 2025.

CHRISTIAN VELCICHAFP


Thirty-six bodies have been lifted out of the abandoned Stilfontein gold mine over two days, police said Tuesday, with fears that dozens of people are still underground despite a months-long effort to force them to leave the shaft.

Another 82 people have left alive since Monday but were then arrested, police Brigadier Athlenda Mathe said in a statement.

"All 82 that have been arrested are facing illegal mining, trespassing and contravention of the immigration act charges," Mathe said.

Illegal miners had taken over the mine shaft once part of South Africa's vast mining industry.

No longer viable for commercial mining, the men, many migrants from neighbouring countries, entered illicitly, hoping to ease their poverty by finding remnants of gold.

Blinded by the bright summer sun, haggard survivors staggered across ochre soil mixed with rubble near Stilfontein, about 140 kilometres southwest of Johannesburg.

Their legs, reduced to skin and bones, wobbled like sticks in oversized rubber boots as they walked to a police checkpoint.

Officers used metal detectors to check that they had not found an ounce of gold in the shaft, which runs 2.6 kilometres underground.

Operations to remove them from the site began in August.

According to the Ministry of Mineral Resources and Energy, 1,576 people have voluntarily left the shaft since then, all but 21 foreigners from neighbouring countries.

To force them out, police restricted the food and water supplies that the surrounding community had been dropping down the shaft.

"They are very sick. They are very dehydrated. You can see they are nearly dying," community leader Johannes Qankase told AFP on Tuesday.

Dire conditions 

Police say hundreds could still be underground, but the exact number is unclear.

"Last week, we received a letter from underground indicating that there were more than 109 bodies," Levies Pilusa, a spokesperson for the residents of the Khuma township, told AFP.

He said that many of the miners had HIV but that police had refused to allow deliveries of the medication that keeps them alive.

A court ordered in November that police must end all restrictions at the shaft, allowing people above ground to resume lowering food and water to those below.

On Monday, a professional mine rescue company set up a rescue winder to reach the miners through a rough hole in the ground.

Minerals Minister Gwede Mantashe, on a visit to the site Tuesday, called the miners "foot soldiers" for those who profit from the illegal trade.

"These foot soldiers are taking this gold to somebody. That somebody must take responsibility for that," he said. "Those who make money out of gold mining must take full responsibility of the risk taken."

According to the Minerals Council of South Africa, the country boasts some of the deepest gold mines in the world, extending kilometres underground.

There were claims in mid-November that up to 4,000 people were underground, but police said the figure was probably in the hundreds.

Over the past weeks, miners who have exited the shaft reported dire conditions underground, including acute hunger and dehydration.

Zinzi Tom, 31, who grew up in Khuma, said the community had gone to court to force authorities to rescue the miners.

"There's nothing to be happy about, but at least those loved ones who have lost their family members, at least they will be able to bury them," he said.

© Agence France-Presse