STILFONTEIN, South Africa
Six bodies have been extracted over the past two days from an abandoned mine in the town of Stilfontein in South Africa, where hundreds of clandestine miners are still underground, a community leader told AFP Wednesday.
“Six bodies were retrieved in
two days, four today and two yesterday,” said Johannes Qankase, a spokesman for
the nearby township of Khuma, where most of the miners live.
The abandoned gold mines some
150 kilometres (90 miles) southwest of the economic capital Johannesburg have
been encircled over the past four weeks by police seeking to dislodge “zama
zamas” (“those who try” in the Zulu language) who are working there illegally.
It is unclear exactly how many
miners are still underground. A local man said he was told there were around
4,000, though police said the figure was probably in the hundreds.
Authorities have been limiting
water and food provisions in an attempt to make them leave the mine.
Thousands of “zama zamas”,
many from neighbouring Mozambique and Lesotho, endure difficult conditions to
work and live in mineral-rich South Africa.
Some locals associate their
presence with a rise in criminality, and South African President Cyril
Ramaphosa has called them a “menace” to the country’s economy and security.
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