Gold One mine 'hostage situation': South African miners tell of escape

Gold One mine 'hostage situation': South African miners tell of escape
News Desk

By News Desk


Published: 25/10/2023

Workers at a South African mine have begun to resurface after being held underground for three days in what police are calling a hostage situation.

Hostage-takers armed with weapons like clubs and mining tools had held more than 500 miners at the Gold One mine, the police said on Wednesday.

The miners were trapped amid a dispute between two trade unions.

The National Union of Mineworkers (NUM) said "hooligans" had held its members against their will.

But the rival Association of Mineworkers and Construction Union (Amcu) denied it had trapped workers at the mine, located near Johannesburg. Amcu insisted the miners were there willingly and were staging a "sit-in" protest.

More than 100 employees re-emerged from the mine on Wednesday morning. One worker, who requested to remain anonymous, told the OceanNewsUK: "I forced my way out because I was worried for my health."

"Lwazi" said he had some empathy for Amcu, which has been fighting for legal recognition at the mine for around five months. NUM currently has a "closed shop" agreement with the Gold One mine, which means it is the only union allowed to represent workers there.

"Although I agree with the fight for another union to be allowed to organise at the mine… I can't say I support the method they have taken," Lwazi said.

Workers' families were gathered outside the mine on Wednesday, waiting for their loved ones to emerge.

One woman told the OceanNewsUK she had been camped out since Monday morning, after her husband failed to return from his shift the night before.

"I am hurting. I do not know when my husband will return. He is not well... he has tuberculosis.

"My husband is the breadwinner. I'm even afraid of going back home as I won't be able to answer my children's questions," she said.

Police spokesperson Brenda Mudiri said officers were interviewing miners as they left the mine.

"Those we interviewed have told us they were held against their will. They told us about 15 hostage-takers. We are unable to say which union these hostage-takers belong to," she said.

Management at the mine echoed the police and NUM's assessments that the miners had been held hostage.

Amcu has accused Gold One bosses of colluding with the NUM, an allegation the mine denies.

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