Eleven
miners emerged from night underground to find emergency vehicles, TV crews, and
police
The Guardian, David Smith in Johannesburg, Sunday 16 February 2014
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| The men were saved from the mine shaft when a routine police patrol came across one of their friends at the site. Photograph: Str/EPA |
Eleven
illegal miners were rescued in South Africa last night after being trapped
underground, apparently by a rival gang intent on stealing their gold.
The group
had broken into a remote, abandoned mine shaft on Saturday to dig for the
precious metal, but ended up being robbed and caught inside when their
assailants blocked the exit with a concrete slab and boulders. They spent a
miserable night underground before being rescued on Sunday, emerging to find
emergency vehicles, TV crews, and police seeking to arrest them.
Early
reports had been of up to 200 people trapped underground. As dusk fell with
just 11 rescued from the mine east of Johannesburg, officials admitted that
they could not be certain whether there were more men still underground, refusing
to be rescued because they feared prison.
Rescuers
said it was too dangerous to go down and look for them but they would leave a
ladder on the wall of the square metre hole so any remaining could climb out if
they wished to. Werner Vermaak, of the emergency service operator ER24, said he
heard from many people at the scene that the miners were trapped deliberately.
"It's quite common for rival gangs to close off mines," he said.
It could
have become the miners' tomb, but the men were saved when a routine police
patrol came across one of their friends at the site.
The rescue
began at 10am on Sunday , with the help of a crane and other heavy equipment.
When rescue workers said the men had claimed they numbered 30, and that 200 or
more were trapped in a tunnel below, it attracted the attention internationally
of both Twitter and television news.
The
concrete slab was removed and rescuers in yellow helmets, dark blue overalls
and boots clustered around the shaft as the miners emerged into the late
afternoon sunshine, some reluctantly because of what was to come. All were
given medical treatment, then taken away in a police van to be charged with
illegal mining.
Moshema
Mosia, the head of disaster and emergency management in the Ekurhuleni area,
said: "At this stage we can't say how many people are still left there.
What we can say is that 11 people managed to come and were rescued. … The
medical team gave them attention, they did a diagnosis. They are healthy and
they are being looked after."
The 11
survivors "did not give any indication as to whether there are still some
people there", he added. "They didn't say much. When we asked if they
were OK, they indicated they were OK."
Illegal
mining of abandoned shafts is common in South Africa and has been dubbed
Johannesburg's second gold rush. The men, known as zama zama, are typically
from poorer African countries and often live underground in dangerous and
precarious conditions. Fatal accidents and turf wars between rival gangs are
common.

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