A Fatal Accident in Zimbabwe Reveals the Costs of Informal Gold Mining

A Fatal Accident in Zimbabwe Reveals the Costs of Informal Gold Mining
Men carry a body bag during rescue operations at a flooded mine in Kadoma, Zimbabwe, Feb. 16, 2019 (AP photo by Tsvangirayi Mukwazhi).

Zimbabwe’s informal mining sector is in the spotlight after an accident at a gold mine killed at least 24 people last month. As many as 70 informal miners were believed to be working inside two abandoned mineshafts near the town of Battlefields, southwest of Harare, when the underground tunnels were flooded by water from a burst dam. Eight miners were rescued but others are unaccounted for and feared dead, as authorities struggled to drain water from the shafts.

President Emmerson Mnangagwa officially declared a state of disaster and pledged all available government resources for rescue efforts. According to many mining experts, the accident was entirely preventable. Augustine Makoni, a veteran of Zimbabwe’s gold mining industry who serves on the executive board of the Gold Mining Association of Zimbabwe, tells WPR in an interview that the mineshafts were left open when they should have been sealed. “The necessary reclamation of those shafts and closing them up—that was not done,” he says. “I then put the blame squarely on the regulatory and supervisory authority.”

Such incidents are common in mineral-rich Zimbabwe, where nearly every province has significant gold deposits. A lack of economic opportunities in other sectors leads many people to seek work in abandoned gold mines, where significant profit can be made with little training and only rudimentary equipment. But the conditions are extremely dangerous. In addition to the risks of mineshafts flooding or collapsing, informal miners often become sick from long-term exposure to harmful substances used in the gold extraction process, like cyanide and mercury.

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