The man slips the plastic pouch of gems into
his mouth, an illicit haul from the sandy deposits scattered among the
mountains of South Africa's diamond coast.
“It's my safe,” he explains, sliding the stash back along the inside of his cheek.
The group of diggers are waiting
for the cover of darkness to make another raid on a disused mine,
opposite their make-shift camp, where 10 miners died in an avalanche
three months ago.
Illegal miners in South Africa are
ready to risk death to chase a share of the mineral riches that shaped
the continent's biggest economy.
In sparsely populated Namaqualand,
where the famed gem deposits run along the icy Atlantic Ocean to the
Namibian border, diamond giant De Beers was once the top employer,
providing 3,000 jobs and building two towns with recreation halls, a
golf course and schools, to house its staff.
But its mines were halted in 2008 and the company's Namaqualand operations are in the final stages of a 225 million rand ($27
million, 22 million euro) sell-off after years of retrenchments.
The slowdown has emptied out the
private mining towns, but has lured growing numbers of diggers from the
area's other small settlements into the abandoned fields.
“I can say that more than 60
percent of the active workforce are involved in the informal diamond
trade,” said Andy Pienaar, of the social outreach office in Komaggas,
one of the few small villages in the mining area.
“There was sort of a blessing from the community that 'people, you may go'“ dig, he added.
“It was about survival. It was
about sustaining and we're not talking about high life standards, we're
talking about just basically survival.”
Komaggas has little sign of gem
wealth along dirt roads that wind past humble homes where many residents
survive on government welfare payments.
But one
local buyer, who also digs with a team who share the profits, estimates
that he has made about 400,000 rand since he started digging three
years ago.
“It changed my life completely. I
don't even mind about looking for a job now because I was running around
Cape Town, Johannesburg, looking for a job Ä there's no need now, I've
got a job now,” he told AFP.
“I'm not a rich man but I can support my family each and every month.”
With some of the world's richest
mineral reserves, mining and its knock-on industries contributed nearly
20 percent of GDP in 2010. Illegal mining losses represent a tiny
fraction of that, but were still estimated at five billion rand four
years ago.
Among the most popular targets for illegal miners are the gold industry's disused mine shafts.
But such shafts see regular
fatalities from working in unsafe conditions. In Namaqualand, the
diggers went underground, into the sandy layers usually mined in open
pits, which eventually turned into a graveyard when the tunnels
collapsed.
“It's
having quite a big impact on us as a business, but one of the biggest
concerns we face around illegal mining is the safety issue associated
with illegal diamond mining,” said De Beers spokesman Innocent Mabusela.
“We would like to see tougher penalties,” he added.
The Namaqualand diggers are only fined 300 rand for trespassing if caught in the mines.
'You can be murdered'
Diamond output is slowing - to
nearly nine million carts in 2010 from more than 15 million five years
earlier - but the country's deposits which produced famed rocks such as
the giant Cullinan diamond are still yielding.
Two years ago, South African gems
brought in the fourth highest values in the world: 15 percent of the $12
billion worldwide production.
There
is talk of “millions” being made in a boom in the area from January
until the May accident, with the fatal Bontekoe site drawing hundreds of
miners who used to queue to get into an underground cave and tunnels.
“It's very difficult and
dangerous, you can be murdered in the process,” said a female buyer who
only wanted to be known as Risa.
“If somebody knows you've got
diamonds, they might follow you and try to get them. If you resist, they
can kill you to get them,” she said.
Despite South Africa's diamond trade regulations, a rock can be easily sold on the black market.
But beyond the profits, the locals
also feel a strong sense of entitlement to the land that predates the
arrival of white prospectors in the late 1920s.
South Africa's apartheid past
handed control of the country's resources to whites and only 8.9 percent
of mines had shifted ownership by 2009.
“De Beers occupies our land and should give it back to us,” said Pienaar.
“We do not want to be slaves on
our own land any more. We don't just want to be workers, we want to be
owners. We want to be part of the decision making process.”
The community plans to lodge a claim to the land and there is also bitterness that the shine of gems has not reached Komaggas.
“Nothing has happened here,” said William Cloete, who runs a licensed mine next to Bontekoe.
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