Hundreds of miners became stuck underground. Why did police block their water supply?

Hundreds of miners became stuck underground. Why did police block their water supply?
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Hundreds of miners became stuck underground. Why did police block their water supply?
Author: Nellie Peyton
Published: Jan, 15 2025 14:03

Bodies are being removed from the gold mine in a cage. The bodies of illegal miners continue to be removed from a gold mine in South Africa here police blocked food and water supplies for months. At least 78 bodies have been removed in what trade unions described as a “horrific” state crackdown on desperate people trying to eke out a living.

 [The government of the Republic of South Africa launch a rescue operation to extract the illegal workers at the abandoned Stilfontein mine in North West, South Africa]
Image Credit: The Independent [The government of the Republic of South Africa launch a rescue operation to extract the illegal workers at the abandoned Stilfontein mine in North West, South Africa]

A total of 78 bodies and 166 survivors - some of them emaciated and disorientated - have been hauled out so far in a court-ordered rescue operation that began on Monday, with hundreds more men still stuck 2 km (1.5 miles) below the surface in a gold mine at Stilfontein, southwest of Johannesburg.

Police had stopped food and water supplies from being taken into the mine since August until a court ruled in December that volunteers could send down essential aid for the miners, known locally as “zama zamas”. “Our mandate was to combat criminality and that is exactly what we’ve been doing,” said Athlenda Mathe, national spokesperson for the South African police, speaking at the site.

“By providing food, water and necessities to these illegal miners it would be the police entertaining and allowing criminality to thrive,” she said. The death toll makes the crackdown on the Stilfontein mine one of the deadliest on miners in recent South African history. As the toll has mounted, so has criticism of the police and of the government, which says the siege was part of a much-needed crackdown on illegal mining.

A map of Stilfontein:. “These miners, many of them undocumented and desperate workers from Mozambique and other Southern African countries, were left to die in one of the most horrific displays of state wilful negligence in recent history,” the South African Federation of Trade Unions said in a statement on Tuesday.

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