Exclusive: Sibanye says clears most illegal miners from gold shafts

Reuters  |  JOHANNESBURG 

By Ed Stoddard

(Reuters) - producer Sibanye-Stillwater arrested nearly 1,400 illegal miners at its South African shafts last year in a blitz the company says has mostly ended the practice at its mines.

Illegal mining has plagued for decades and it costs the government and the industry more than 20 billion rand ($1.7 billion) a year in lost sales, taxes and royalties, according to a Chamber of Mines report last year.

vowed last year to take the war to illegal miners and clear them from its shafts by January 2018 under the battle cry "Zero Zama", after the Zulu term for illegal miners.

According to data provided to by Sibanye, it made 797 arrests in 2017 linked to at its Cooke operations and 1,383 overall. The blitz peaked in June with more than 500 arrests, above the 443 arrests in 2016 as a whole.

While fell short of its goal of stamping out altogether, Sibanye's said based on available intelligence, "there are only about 40 to 50 illegal miners operating now, scattered across our Kloof and Driefontein operations".

Froneman said last year the number of illegal miners in the company's operations numbered "in the thousands". was the first South African miner to set itself a deadline to stop the practice.

Most zamas are undocumented immigrants from neighbouring countries who have long provided migrant labour for South Africa's mines, but are now being laid off. The syndicates that support them and traffic the illegal metals are well-funded, well-established and highly dangerous, security experts say.

'END OF STAGE ONE'

Sibanye's drive was helped by the mothballing of its loss-making Cooke operation west of Johannesburg, which was the epicentre of activity in its shafts.

Illegal miners gain access to working mines through bribery and other means, forcing companies to dispatch security teams to the shafts and to tighten entrance measures.

spent 300 million rand last year and will spend another 300 million rand this year on access and biometric controls at the entry points to its mines.

"It still costs us so I don't know if we will ever declare a victory but we are at the end of stage one," Froneman told

"My biggest concern about is the corruption of our supervisors and our employees.

That just sets a path for creating a rotten organisation. Everybody gets bribed and the integrity of the business just gets undermined," he said.

Froneman admitted there was no guarantee illegal miners would not try to return, so the company needed to maintain its costly vigilance.

Security experts have said would struggle to eradicate completely but could reduce it by 90 percent.

is the second South African producer to announce a milestone linked to this month.

said it would spend up to $500 million to mechanise its in

The mine was rendered worthless when it was invaded by thousands of illegal miners. They were removed by the military last year and the South African company decided to revive the mine as an automated operation after a feasibility study.

($1 = 11.5400 rand)

(Editing by James Macharia and David Clarke)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, February 26 2018. 15:29 IST
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