100 people killed in South Africa mining pit

More than two dozen illegal miners have been rescued and at least nine bodies recovered from an abandoned gold mine in South Africa, as rescue operations resumed Tuesday to reach potentially dozens more people underground.

Rescuers and South African Police Service (SAPS) officers carry remains in blue body bags during a rescue operation to retrieve illegal miners from an abandoned gold shaft in Stilfontein on January 13, 2025. Rescuers hoisted seven illegal miners and at least four bodies out of an abandoned gold mine in South Africa on January 13, 2025 amid claims that hundreds more may be underground as well as many corpses.
A professional mine rescue company sent a large cage down into the shaft, launching an official operation to retrieve men at the site near Stilfontein, about 140 kilometres (90 miles) southwest of Johannesburg. (Photo by Christian Velcich / AFP)

A professional mine rescue company on Monday sent a large cage to retrieve men at the site near Stilfontein, about 140 kilometres (90 miles) southwest of Johannesburg.

Thousands of illegal miners, many of them hailing from other countries, are said to operate in abandoned mine shafts across mineral-rich South Africa.

Community leader Johannes Qankase told AFP on Tuesday that 26 people had been rescued and nine bodies recovered the previous day at the Stilfontein site.

“They are very sick. They are very dehydrated. You can see they are nearly dying,” he said of the people rescued.

Most had been taken to hospital while two were believed to be in police custody, Qankase said.

EDITORS NOTE: Graphic content / This video grab from an undated video released by Mining Affected Communities United in Action (MACUA) and Stilfontein Solidarity Committee on January 13, 2025 shows what appears to be a long line of bodies inside the mine in Stilfontein wrapped up in improvised shrouds. A long-running standoff at an abandoned mine in the South African town of Stilfontein appears to take a grim turn as footage released by two local groups working for mining communities, MACUA and Stilfontein Solidarity Committee, appeared to show a long line of bodies inside the mine wrapped up in improvised shrouds. Amongst the miners still alive several appeared from the footage to be seriously undernourished.
Operations began on January 15, 2025 to retrieve illegal miners from an abandoned gold mine shaft in South Africa amid claims that several hundred men underground as well as many bodies.
A professional mine rescue company sent a large cage down into the shaft at Stilfontein. (Photo by MACUA and Stilfontein Solidarity Committee / AFP) / NO USE AFTER JANUARY 23, 2025 15:05:28 GMT – NO USE AFTER JANUARY 23, 2025 15:05:28 GMT – RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – MANDATORY CREDIT « AFP PHOTO /MACUA AND STILFONTEIN SOLIDARITY COMMITTEE » – NO MARKETING NO ADVERTISING CAMPAIGNS – DISTRIBUTED AS A SERVICE TO CLIENTS [ NO ARCHIVE ] /
Government officials were expected to be at the site Tuesday as the recovery continued.

The operation follows a weeks-long saga at the abandoned shaft, where authorities have been accused of trying to force the miners to surface by throttling food and water supplies lowered to them by the surrounding community.

It is not clear how many people are in the shaft.

The government on Monday stated that more than 1,000 people involved in illegal mining activity in the area had “surfaced and been apprehended” to date.

There were claims in mid-November that up to 4,000 people were underground but police have said the figure was probably in the hundreds.

Six bodies were brought up from the mine in early December and one in November. There have been claims recently that there were more than 100 corpses underground.

Over the past weeks the miners who have exited the shaft reported dire conditions underground, including acute hunger and dehydration. Some were arrested for being in South Africa without proper documentation.

Locally known as “zama zamas” — “those who try” in the Zulu language — illegal miners frustrate mining companies and are accused of criminality by residents.

bur-giv/yad

© Agence France-Presse