DETAILED REPORTS ARE POSTED DAILY ABOUT THE AFRIKANER/BOER GENOCIDE- also visit Farmi Tracker for the latest updates

Contact Me

Adriana Stuijt
censorbugbear@gmail.com
Nol_Stuijt@hotmail.com
tel Netherlands_31_519_701_266

ASYLUM:
http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.nl/2012/06/asylum-emigration-info-for-sa-whites.html

PHOTOALBUM 2009-2012
http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.nl/p/photo-gallery.html

Crime Busters of SA: farm murders 2001-2003
http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.nl/2003/12/crime-busters-of-sa-2001-2003-farm.html

Solidarity trade union: - list of farm murders
2003 - June 2009:
http://www.solidariteitradio.co.za/wp-content/uploads/plaasaanvalle.pdf


Search

Loading...

Followers

Blog Archive

About Me

My Photo
A Stuijt
Retired South African medical journalist, ex-Sunday Times of Johannesburg.
View my complete profile
Thursday, 9 October 2008

Hunger forces locals to dig for coal from 1800s SA mine...

Print Friendly and PDF

INDWE COAL MINESept 15 2008 -- DORDRECHT, South Africa. "You will starve to death if you wait for the government to feed you," retrenched mineworker Bongani Fuzile told the hungry townsfolk of Indwe ten years ago -- and they all agreed, and started earning their food by digging for coal 200m down, tearing it out with shovels and their hands from deep inside the mountain's abandoned, candle-lit 1800s mine...

Local journalist BONGANI FUZILE reports that hunger in the East Cape township of Indwe is forcing many local residents to risk their lives each day - digging coal out of the local abandoned coal mine.

They are digging to put food on the table for their families and haven't had an accident in the old mine since the close-knit community started doing this ten years ago, reports Fuzile.The mine entrance, halfway up a mountain, is visible from the road on the left coming in from the Dordrecht side.

The mine was unofficially 'reopened' by local retrenched mineworker Phikile Skeyi in 1998 after he found the people from his town were dying of hunger.

“You know, you don’t have to wait for the government to come and support you; you will starve to death. It takes one man’s brains to feed a nation,” he told the townsfolk.

Phikile worked in the Free State as a miner for most of his life but was retrenched.
He decided to reopen the disused mine, which was shut down in the late 1800s, for the sake of his community.

  • To get started he spoke to all unemployed young men from his township, asking them if they were interested in the “mining business” .

'I have chased poverty away...'

Indwe “As there were no other prospects for the people in the area, they were keen to join me and we started our plans,” he said. Phikile’s plan to open the mine took root the day he received a letter informing him of his retrenchment. “I knew that I had to open my own mine back home. I wasn’t worried at all that my family would have to go to bed hungry, and here I am today, still doing the job with my guys,” he said, a big smile creasing his face. “I’ve chased poverty away.”

The mine has about ten entrances. As we approached we saw people smeared in black coal dust from head to foot. Many were not too friendly, but I introduced myself by my clan name. I could see their faces relaxing a bit.

  • We don’t entertain strangers in this mine because strangers mean trouble,” explained Skeyi.
    “I won’t say I am the boss here; we all share the fruits of this mountain. We are working as a team but of course there should be someone who has to be a leader in any organisation,” he said.

Since the mine was reopened 10 years ago, Skeyi says, not one accident has occurred due to their safety standards.
“No one comes here drunk. We work as a team and if we see that there is a problem between two employees, we quickly sort it out. “It is dangerous inside there and any fights can lead to death and we don’t want that,” he said.

Candles, battery-operated torches:

Skeyi also told the Dispatch news team that although the mine had been closed for over a century, the old rail tracks still remained inside the mountain. They mine as deep as 200m hauling coal out of the mine with their bare hands after it is dug out with picks and shovels . Underground, candles burn the entire day while at times battery- operated torches are used.

To stop rocks from falling on them they use big logs as support beams, although this does not guarantee safety.
Masixole Malava, 20, had just joined the mine and said the work was risky.
“But we don’t have a choice. We have to stay alive,” he said.

Malava’s main job is to pick out rocks from the coal. “I am not interested in getting inside the mine. It’s dangerous and too dark.” Work starts at 10am and ends any time in the afternoon. If a day is fruitful they can carry out about 150 full loads of coal.

  • Their customers are mostly business people who come from as far as Queenstown, Mthatha, Tarkastad and other areas to buy coal.

Employees earn anything from R40 a day, depending on their experience and length of service. -
http://www.dispatch.co.za/article.aspx?id=249275

Background on Indwe:
http://www.easterncapetours.com/

6-million starving people in South Africa:
http://censorbugbear-reports.blogspot.com/2008/08/fresh-food-flow-to-gauteng-markets-drop.html