For miners, no escape from danger, below ground and above

03 September 2020 - 17:20 By Eleni Giokos - CNN correspondent
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The author writes that Covid-19 means miners now face risks below ground and on the surface.
The author writes that Covid-19 means miners now face risks below ground and on the surface.
Image: 123RF/tomas1111

I was always struck by the eyes. Red and sunken. Skin covered in coal dust and sweat. Overalls darkened by coal.

I remember the rush after a shift ended. The bread; half loaves handed to hungry mineworkers; the thick dust ingrained into their worn fingers mingling with the crusts. The miners bought half loaves because it was cheaper and because it was an easy, filling meal. It would be paired with a traditional fermented drink known as “amasi”. I remember the coal dust covered money.

My personal history is intertwined with mining. My parents brought me to SA from Greece when I was just four years old. We settled in a town known then as Witbank, 110km from Johannesburg. Today it is known by its Nguni name, Emalahleni, which literally means “place of coal”.

There was no escaping the town’s product — its stark purpose — even then. As children we would smear Vaseline on to windows to see how quickly the ever-present coal dust would accumulate on them. The smell of sulphur permeated the air — a running joke that our town was a rotten egg and could mask other unpleasant bodily smells.

My mother made frequent trips to the doctor to try to remedy the chronic respiratory issues I had, without doubt because of our proximity to the source of most of the town’s income. What sustained us, was also weakening us.

In 2013, when an EU research team measured the air quality around the town, the levels of chromium and barium were so high that their instruments were unable to record accurate measurements.

The half loaves in those miners’ hands were placed there by my father, who ran a small general store selling everything from baked goods to cleaning products on a mining residential property. It’s where I would spend my weekends and school holidays in the mid-90s. We would buy loaves from a bakery and cut them to cater for demand for smaller, affordable portions. Miners and their families would come in asking for half white bread or “isinkwa isimhlope” and what always struck me was the plethora of small coins to make the purchase.

My parents spoke little English when they arrived in SA, and as a child I would often translate for them. The general store was my connection to a world that has stayed with me; the counter that separated me from clients a physical symbol of the inequalities between their lives and mine.

I learnt my first few words of Zulu there, and I learnt to understand just a little of what it meant to work deep underground: the hardiness, stamina and resolve; the dirt, the poverty, and the risks.

Those risks also touched me personally. In 2014, a close friend, months away from his wedding, was killed in a mining accident. In a twist of bitter fate, I even found myself having to announce the news on air at the time.

And yet, until this month, I had never been inside a coal mine. Descending 200m below ground, at Sasol’s Impumelelo mine in Secunda, I was anxious, but excited to finally grasp an extra piece of the jigsaw. But Covid-19 has added a new layer of risk to this already hazardous business.

Coal remains utterly vital to SA’s economy; about 80% of the country’s power still comes from it. For that reason, there has been no possibility of a pandemic pause. All who work here are essential to the mine’s operation, and Sasol takes their safety seriously. Before we descend, we are briefed and supplied with special equipment — emergency breathing apparatus and a sensor on my belt that will automatically stop heavy machinery if I get too close.

“Everyone on the mine is critical,” Sandile Siyaya, the mine’s general manager, tells me.

But Covid-19 precautions are another challenge entirely. The company has introduced strict protocols to keep its miners safe and its mines working. Masks are ubiquitous, sanitising between shifts mandatory. There is a clinic on-site to test, monitor and care for employees.

Even with these precautions, however, there have been more than 100 cases at this mine alone. When one miner tests positive, everyone on that worker’s section is quarantined. As a result, productivity is down by about 16%.

The miners’ work is essential in more ways than one. Pelaelo Mthombeni was the mine’s first employee to contract the virus. She recovered, and is now grateful to be back underground. “My kids go to school because of this job,” she tells me. “I can pay a helper at home because of this job, I can do many things, I can support my family.”

Davis Cook, CEO of the Research Institute for Innovation and Sustainability, says the coal industry presents specific problems because of its scale. The industry employs about 430,000 people in SA. Cook says community transmission was “a far greater influence” for coal than for gold and platinum mining, which employ about 300,000 people combined.

Mining here has also borne the legacy of apartheid, and that system’s lack of interest in the welfare of black workers. There has always been a question of whether mining companies are doing enough for their communities and their workers’ health.

Dr Thuthula Balfour, head of health at Minerals Council SA, agrees that health has been less of a priority than safety for the industry. “It's quite true that, over the decades, it's been hard for people to take health at the same level as safety, and maybe it's because safety is so in your face, when someone dies on site in front of your eyes, compared to a person who dies from a health-related illness.”

She believes Covid-19 could shift that balance. “I think maybe what this epidemic has actually done is to show just how health is also quite important, in that you've got people who were dying ... most people, you know, within two weeks they would die.”

The Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu) is less convinced. Covid-19 will be an eye opener for the mining industry, right across the board, Amcu's regional chairperson, Manzezulu Nkambule, believes. “You can see the numbers are rising. They’ve been inhaling this dust for years. And when the virus comes in, it already finds an immune system that is weakened and then it attacks.”

Lucky Kgatle, senior vice-president of Sasol Mining, says Covid-19 has sharpened their focus on their workers’ communities. “We had to acknowledge we are part of the communities where we are operating, and we’ve had to share the challenges and the hardships they are facing, the uncertainties that are happening,” she says.

“We face a lot of criticism, but I believe we do a lot of work to ensure our workers’ safety. We have not arrived yet, there are still challenges, but a lot of investment. Many of our employees feel more safe here at work rather than outside.”

This last point is perhaps the most acute part of the problem. While the risks below ground are being carefully mitigated, those on the surface are mounting. “It’s hard, man, working underground is hard,” Sasol miner, Percy Simelane, tells me.

At the company-owned housing complex where he lives with his wife and two sons, no-one from Sasol has come to talk about Covid-19, he says. “Once we leave the mine, they’ve forgotten about it. They say you must look after yourself.”

Fear, he says, is ever present. “I’m afraid for my boys,” he says. “It’s tough, it’s tough.”

For miners, it was ever thus; but the pandemic has raised the stakes for everyone involved. Simelane will keep going underground. He must. Like so many in this sector he is an essential employee, and his job means everything.

His eyes reminded me of the many miners I had met as a young girl, this time accentuated by the mask that covered his face.

Marketplace Africa aired on Saturday August 29 on CNN International

The show will be repeated at the following times:

Saturday September 5 at 05:15 BST and 07:45 BST

Sunday September 6 at 06:15 BST

Monday September 7 at 03:45 BST​


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