South Africa's Illegal Gold Mines - YouTube

Channel: VICE News

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South Africa was once synonymous with gold mining.
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However, due to massive industrial decline many of the most productive mines the world has ever known
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lie abandoned and unused.
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The US Geological Survey estimates that South Africa retains nearly 50% of the world's unmined gold.
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In fact, Johannesburg sits on top of the biggest gold basin ever discovered.
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So, with an unemployment rate estimated between 25 and 40 percent,
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it's perhaps unsurprising that abandoned gold mines across the region are seeing an explosion in illegal activity.
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I had someone told me about gold, there is something called gold. I wanted to know what is gold.
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Kenneth Damini is a local chairperson for the community policing forum. He regularly attempts to mediate between illegal Miners and the wider community,
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as well as local law enforcement.
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There's three groups in the inner mine. There's a group, they're calling themselves
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Swazi, the other one is they're calling themselves Sotho because they speak the Sesotho [language], the others
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is
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Zimbabwean.
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Right now they've, they've got a
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AK-47 rifle,
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R1 they've got all those things. When I tell them, "guys you get killed in that mine,
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why don't you stop?" They say, "what we're going to eat after that?"
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Some of them they refuse to work for them, then they just shoot them straight away.
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Doc is a member of the Swazi gang. He's been an illegal miner for six years, risking his life daily to try and support his family.
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mo' fyah
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The number of unrecorded deaths in illegal mines is unknown,
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but according to some observers could number well into the hundreds. Collapses are common, as is sabotage by rival gangs.
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In February this year, the Swazi's mine was sealed with concrete by rival miners,
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trapping an estimated 200 underground until rescue services could dig them out.
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Several were seriously injured and many were arrested as they surfaced. In late March one of the chiefs of the Swazi Gang was shot dead
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in a suspected assassination, striking fear into the community that the levels of violence will escalate.
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These are called stones, these.
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nxa, you're okay.
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Hundreds of zama-zama stay for weeks in the mines living in darkness, kilometers beneath Johannesburg.
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One of the biggest risks faced by Doc and the other miners underground are the noxious fumes pumped out by the
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generators used to power the drills. With no ventilation,
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high concentrations of poisonous gas can accumulate in the tunnels, making them sick, dizzy and causing them to faint.
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Fellow miners pour water on those affected to keep them awake. If they pass out, there's a good chance, they won't wake up.
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The mine is most at risk of collapse when dynamite found underground is used to break down the rock wall.
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Doc and his friend Given take their sample of rock to a makeshift processing plant on the squatter camp.
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They and other Zama-Zamas' [miners], work tirelessly to make what living they can out of the rock they sweated for underground.
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Once the gold is weighed, the buyer pays the miners with a street hand off.
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The price they get for their products at this early stage in the buyer's chain is just a fraction of the high street value for
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gold this pure.
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For this sample - after a whole day underground - Doc and Given are handed only 150 Rand, roughly 15 dollars.
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In February, the Swazi's Mine was sabotaged by rivals, trapping Doc
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and many other miners underground. Doc was injured in the attack leaving him in a wheelchair.
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After one of Doc's fellow miners was shot dead in the street in late March, there are fears that the violence will continue to escalate.