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WSWS : News
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Africa
Twelve die in South African gold mine disaster
By Barbara Slaughter
10 May 2001
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Twelve mineworkers were killed in an explosion at the Beatrix
gold mine on Tuesday May 8, in South Africa's worst mining disaster
in two years.
The explosion at the mine near Welkom, 280km southwest of Johannesburg,
occurred about 850 metres underground and tore apart a development
area where the men were working. Two more miners suffered serious
burns, one of whom is in a critical condition in a local hospital.
Six others escaped unharmed. Four thousand men were working in
the mine at the time of the explosion and all have been accounted
for. As news of the disaster spread, hundreds of anxious relatives
telephoned the mine to find out whether their loved ones were
safe.
The immediate cause of the disaster is thought to have been
a methane gas explosion. A broken fan had been reported the night
before, which would have reduced air circulation and increased
the danger of a gas build up. Four senior members of stafftwo
electricians, a vent officer and a production supervisor, who
had been sent down the mine to investigate the breakage, were
among the dead. The other eight fatalities were construction workers
repairing tracks. The disaster comes 51 weeks after a similar
explosion killed seven at the same mine on May 15 last year.
In a statement, Gold Fields Free State divisional manager Dana
Roets claimed that the lessons of last year's disaster had been
learnt and the four senior members of staff were equipped with
devices used to measure the presence of methane gas. He said that
the deadly gas is "lighter than air and so in a haulage area
methane can be quite high overhead and difficult to detect".
He added that the lack of circulation caused by the broken fan
could increase the danger of a methane build up.
The government has announced that there will be an investigation
into the explosion. One question that must be addressed is why
work at the mine had not been stopped, at least in the vicinity
of the broken fan, when the danger of a build up of methane was
known. With 4,000 miners underground at the time, the disaster
could have been far greater.
South Africa's deep-level gold mines are among the most dangerous
work environments in the world. The death toll this century is
reported as anything from 69,000 to 100,000, with more than one
million workers injured in South African gold mines.
The gold is reached by blasting, which destabilizes the overhead
roofs and creates a constant danger of rock falls. Methane gas
explosions and fire are also serious hazards, causing many deaths.
In the industry's last major accident in July 1999, a methane
gas explosion at a mine in the gold belt southwest of Johannesburg
killed 19 miners. The country's worst mining disaster was in 1986,
when 177 workers were killed as a result of a polyurethane fire
at a mine east of Johannesburg. A total of 313 miners were killed
in 1999, 372 in 1998 and 424 in 1997.
At the time of the accident in July 1999, a BBC report gave
some idea of conditions underground: "All of South Africa's
significant gold deposits are very deep underground, miles down,
at depths that ordinary human beings find hard to comprehend.
"The shafts are so deep that the rock is hot to the touch.
The devil's workplace. And like the devil's workplace, working
at these depths is very dangerous. Newspaper reports talk of mine
cave-ins and shaft collapses. The real thing is far nastier, where
the pressure builds up in deep level rock until the whole tunnel
explodes inwards, footwall, hangingwall, sidewall, the lot, crushing
completely anything in its way."
The end of the apartheid regime has brought the introduction
of better safety regulations but the unions complain that there
are still not enough inspectors to enforce them, and that some
mine managers still put output before safety.
Even though there has been some improvement in the industry's
safety record since 1994, over the past three years the death
rate has averaged more than one miner killed everyday in South
Africa's gold mines.
The South African gold industry has to compete on the world
markets with modern, open cast gold production in North America
and Australia. Here miners cut the tops off low-grade mountain
deposits, which are then crushed, soaked in cyanide and the precious
metal extracted from the liquor. This low cost, low labour production
threatens the very existence of the South African gold industry
and increases pressure to maximise production at all costs, resulting
in disasters like the one at the Beatrix mine this week.
See Also:
Underground explosion
adds to China's appalling death toll in coal mines
[6 October 2000]
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