Current:Home > ContactMiners from a rival union hold hundreds of colleagues underground at a gold mine in South Africa -Thrive Money Mindset
Miners from a rival union hold hundreds of colleagues underground at a gold mine in South Africa
View
Date:2025-04-27 16:08:40
JOHANNESBURG (AP) — A group of miners from an unregistered, rival union are holding around 500 of their colleagues underground for the second day at a gold mine in South Africa over a union dispute. Some 15 miners have been injured in scuffles, the head of the mine said on Tuesday.
Details were sketchy and there were conflicting statements about what happened.
According to Jon Hericourt, CEO of New Kleynfontein Gold Mine company, which manages the mine, the incident erupted early on Monday when the miners from the unregistered union prevented hundreds of others from leaving after their night shift ended at the Modder East mine in Springs, east of Johannesburg.
He said he did not know exactly how many of the miners were being “held hostage” by others from the rival union. There were all sorts of hammers, picks, shovels and other mining equipment that could potentially be used as weapons, he said.
Police were deployed to the mine but they have not been in contact with anyone underground despite trying to reach them via mine telephones and two-way radios.
Hericourt said there were at least 543 employees underground in various sections of the mine. He added that there was some initial contact early on Monday with the alleged hostage-takers.
“Engineers who were working in the mine on Sunday morning were also caught up (in this),” Hericourt said.
At least one man had sustained a serious head injury in scuffles, Hericourt said. The mine sent a paramedic and a security officer to bring him out on Monday after an agreement that they could, but the two were also taken hostage, he said.
The National Union of Mineworkers, which is the sole recognized union at the mine, said more than 500 of its members were being held against their will underground by what it referred to as “hooligans.”
“They are still preventing them from coming to the surface,” NUM representative Mlulameli Mweli said, adding there were also female mine employees trapped underground. “NUM calls for the law enforcement agencies in South Africa to intervene and go underground and arrest the hooligans who are holding our members against their will.”
Hericourt blamed members of the rival AMCU union, saying it has demanded to be the sole syndicate representing the miners at Modder East.
Meanwhile, AMCU has disputed Hericourt’s version of events, saying that there was a sit-in protest by miners in support of the union. New Kleynfontein Gold Mine manages Modder East, which is owned by the Gold One Group.
Rivalry between the NUM and AMCU unions was partly responsible for one of South Africa’s most horrific mining episodes, when 34 striking mineworkers were shot and killed by police at a platinum mine in Marikana in the North West province in 2012.
Six other mineworkers and two security officials were killed in days of violence that preceded the mass shooting by police.
___
Imray reported from Cape Town, South Africa.
___
AP Africa news: https://apnews.com/hub/africa
veryGood! (446)
Related
- Federal hiring is about to get the Trump treatment
- These On-Sale Amazon Shorts Have 12,000+ 5-Star Ratings— & Reviewers Say They're So Comfortable
- What's Next for Johnny Depp: Inside His Busy Return to the Spotlight
- Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's Son Prince Archie Receives Royally Sweet 4th Birthday Present
- Sam Taylor
- Indiana police officer Heather Glenn and man killed as confrontation at hospital leads to gunfire
- How Anthony Bourdain's Raw Honesty Made His Demons Part of His Appeal
- Dad falls 200 feet to his death from cliff while hiking with wife and 5 kids near Oregon's Multnomah Falls
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Power Plants’ Coal Ash Reports Show Toxics Leaking into Groundwater
Ranking
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Baby girl among 4 found dead by Texas authorities in Rio Grande river on U.S.-Mexico border in just 48 hours
- The EPA Proposes a Ban on HFC-23, the Most Potent Greenhouse Gas Among Hydrofluorocarbons, by October 2022
- Stranded motorist shot dead by trooper he shot after trooper stopped to help him, authorities say
- US wholesale inflation accelerated in November in sign that some price pressures remain elevated
- Tips to help dogs during fireworks on the Fourth of July
- Judge made lip-synching TikTok videos at work with graphic sexual references and racist terms, complaint alleges
- NASCAR contractor electrocuted to death while setting up course for Chicago Street Race
Recommendation
Nearly 400 USAID contract employees laid off in wake of Trump's 'stop work' order
Proposed rule on PFAS forever chemicals could cost companies $1 billion, but health experts say it still falls short
Seeing Clouds Clearly: Are They Cooling Us Down or Heating Us Up?
Oil Investors Call for Human Rights Risk Report After Standing Rock
Meet the volunteers risking their lives to deliver Christmas gifts to children in Haiti
Why Grayson Chrisley Says Parents Todd and Julie's Time in Prison Is Worse Than Them Dying
Warm Arctic, Cold Continents? It Sounds Counterintuitive, but Research Suggests it’s a Thing
Biochar Traps Water and Fixes Carbon in Soil, Helping the Climate. But It’s Expensive