Minister Mantashe ignores the plight of the Poor while batting for the Rich.
In response to the recent court judgement in the Pretoria
High Court, Minister Mantashe lamented the ruling, claiming that “the
community of Xolobeni needs mining in order to bring about much-needed
development in the area” and that “mining is being treated like a curse rather
than a blessing. It is not treated as a wealth, it is treated as more of a
negative. It is a polluter, it is a depravation and all that. That worries me a
great deal because the mining we have, we are endowed with it naturally. We
should just be forced to mine responsibly.”
Minister Mantashe`s comments capture in a few short
sentences the essence of why conflict between mining companies and communities
have become so pervasive and why communities have been forced to resort to the
courts in the face of a deep chasm of understanding between government and the
people, whose interest’s government is supposed to represent.
The assertion by the
Minister that mining will bring development and other benefits to communities
does not stand up to any kind of scrutiny and flies in the face of the lived
reality of those affected by mining.
ActionAid South Africa, in collaboration with Mining
Affected Communities United in Action (MACUA) and Women Affected by Mining
United in Action (WAMUA) have conducted social audits in 10 communities
affected by mining across 8 provinces and our preliminary findings suggest that
the Minister is out of touch
Our research, which will be published in the first quarter of
2019, points to a government who has abandoned affected communities to the
mercy of corporate trickle-down development while the bulk of any corporate
social responsibility and development money and benefit disappears into the
vacuum of politically and economically connected elites leaving the vast
majority stuck in a vicious cycle of poverty.
Among some of the most startling findings of our research we
found that according to PWC reports that have been compiled for Johannesburg
Stock Exchange listed corporate entities within the South African Mining
Industry since 2009 and incorporating financial results from 2007, the South
African Mining Industry has, despite a consistent media narrative in which the
mining industry corporates are cast as victims struggling to make a
profit, accumulated net profits of R221
Billion Rands over this period.
The declared profits do not include the undeclared illicit
financial flows which the African Monitor claims peaked at R237 Billion per
annum in 2011. According to the African Monitor, South Africa has lost a
cumulative R1,007 Billion to illicit outflows between 2002 and 2011.
The state on the other hand, remains a significant
beneficiary of the mining regime as it is currently configured and the same PWC
report series from 2009 to June 2018, suggest that the state has received R160
billion in direct tax revenues during this period. An additional amount of
approximately R45 billion is estimated to be paid to government as Royalties.
In all, the PWC reports (which do not factor in any potential mis-invoicing
and/or illicit financial flows) estimate that government takes approximately
24% of value reported among the listed JSE mining corporates, employees 47% of value
reported and shareholders, 29% of value reported. Community investments by
contrast has only amounted to 0.9% over the same period.
But, as has been shown in this report, none of the value
from these community investments are experienced in the lived realities of affected
communities who participated in this survey. Up to 79% of respondents in our
survey, those to whom these benefits are meant to accrue, have not participated
in or benefited from the claimed investments.
73% of respondents indicated that there were no individuals
in their household who either held a job at the mine or who was previously
employed by the mine. Of the 27% of respondents who indicated that there were
individuals from their household who had either previously been or currently
are employed at the mine, 41% indicated that they were casual manual jobs on
a piecemeal or contract basis, with a
further 60 respondents or 33% describing the employment as other.
While each community had specific concerns which were
directly related to their lived reality, the aggregate themes which emerged
from the responses indicate that environmental issues, such as air, land and
water pollution, which impacts on human and livestock health, soil and water
quality, were by far the greatest concern across the mining communities
surveyed.
Concerns about environmental impacts were closely followed
by concerns around the unsafe environment produced by mining activities. These
relate to concerns about blasting tremors and damage to houses caused by the blasting
as well as rising crime within communities.
Following from the environmental concerns and to some extent
the concerns about a generally unsafe environment, the issue of health, ranging
from TB and HIV to rash and skin infections and concerns about asthma,
silicosis and chest and lung problems and Cancer are some of the issues
highlighted by respondents.
The data and responses from respondents suggest that
immediate health and safety concerns outweighed issues of corruption and
accountability even though the theme of corruption, nepotism and lack of
accountability was consistent throughout the surveyed communities.
As one respondent put it: “they do not employ the community
and also our community is now medically unfit due to chemicals that our mine is
using and they do not even supply us with skills development centres - People
are unable to independently access livelihood opportunities after getting sick
at the mines.”
So, while mining is an enormously profitable enterprise for
some, it is curse for others. What the Minister misses in his lament is the
fact that the mining industry has been and continues under his leadership, to
operate irresponsibly and by so doing they continue to alienate thousands of
communities as it slashes a destructive path through the natural environment
and social fabric of South African society while the politically connected
laugh all the way to bank.
Unless a more just mining regime is negotiated for impacted
communities, the Minister will have to accept that he will face more court
challenges and more conflict on the ground.





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