Source: Voice of America
Emilie Iob
JOHANNESBURG / MASERU—
Five of South
Africa's largest gold mining companies recently announced they will
create a working group to deal with the issue of occupational lung
disease.
This move comes as the sector faces what could be South Africa's
biggest-ever class action lawsuit. More than 25,000 miners are seeking
compensation from gold mining companies, saying they failed to protect
them from Silicosis, a debilitating and incurable lung disease.
Back in his village in Lesotho, former miner David Maribenyane must
rely on his home garden to feed his family. At 48 years old, he can't
run or walk long distances, making it almost impossible to get a job.
Maribenyane has Silicosis, which he said he contracted working for more
than 20 years underground in a gold mine in South Africa.
‘’I'm very angry at the mining houses. I came home empty handed and a
cripple," said Maribenyane. "I'm worried about the future because I
need to feed my family and to do so, I have to plow; now, I can't
because of my shortness of breath.”
Crystalline silica dust
Silicosis is caused by breathing crystalline silica dust -- a human lung
carcinogen -- found in mines. It causes shortness of breath, general
weakness and increased susceptibility to tuberculous. It cannot be
cured.
Maribenyane is one of tens of thousands of former miners who’ve joined a
class action suit filed by three South African law firms in an attempt
to hold 30 of South Africa’s gold mining companies liable for the
Silicosis.
"These box files are the files of the individual clients," said Richard Spoor, who is one of the attorneys.
"Silicosis is not a new thing. It's a very old disease. It's very
well understood for a long, long time," he said. "There have been laws
to protect miners for a hundred years. Those laws are very simple, they
say 'you may not expose workers to harmful quantities of dust. You may
not do that, it's against the law'."
The class action suit came about after Spoor won a ground-breaking
case three years ago in which a former miner successfully sued his
employer for negligence which led to his contracting Silicosis.
Building the case is taking time. Many of the affected miners are
from neighboring countries. So they must be tracked down, screened for
Silicosis and informed about their option to join the class action suit.
In Lesotho, that's the job of Isaac Shafiq, from the Mineworker
Development Agency, or MDA.
"Mostly they do not know that they have Silicosis. Most of them go for
screening in our local health facilities. But the result is always TB.
It doesn't go further to determine if it's actually Silicosis or what,"
said Shafiq.
Numerous challenges
Mining companies are challenging the class action, claiming the cause
of Silicosis is up for debate. For former miner Mokete Bokaako,
however, the connection is obvious.
"I've never worked anywhere else than in the mines. I'm like this
because of the mines and I believe that the mines owe me something," he
said.
Bokaako said he only found out about his lung condition a few years ago
after he was retrenched, came back home to Lesotho and was screened by
the class action campaign.
"I’m angry when I think that we had a health checkup every 6 months, or
every year, and the mining company never told me I had Silicosis," said
Bokaako.
In November, five of South Africa's biggest mining companies said they
would create a working group on occupational lung disease. In the
meantime, a ruling on whether the class action suit can proceed is
expected in October 2015. It is estimated that one in four current and
former gold mineworkers have contracted Silicosis.