Water pollution near mines prompts probe

8764 2010.6.22 A game reserve on the Tweelopiesspruit near Krugersdorp, West Rand, is the recipient of untreated acid mine drainage. Dams into which this heavy metalled water runs lost all their fish a long time ago, but hippo still live here and there are concerns serious concerns for their health. The reeds filter the water, but not enough to prevent catastrophic damage. Picture: Cara Viereckl

8764 2010.6.22 A game reserve on the Tweelopiesspruit near Krugersdorp, West Rand, is the recipient of untreated acid mine drainage. Dams into which this heavy metalled water runs lost all their fish a long time ago, but hippo still live here and there are concerns serious concerns for their health. The reeds filter the water, but not enough to prevent catastrophic damage. Picture: Cara Viereckl

Published May 22, 2014

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Johannesburg - South Africa’s anti-corruption ombudsman has begun a probe into water pollution allegedly caused by mining companies.

The inquiry by the Public Protector is in its early stages, spokesman Oupa Segalwe said by e-mail.

“The investigation has to do with alleged pollution of water as a result of mining operations in a number of provinces,” Segalwe said.

Scientists have found high quantities of uranium, arsenic, sulfuric acid and other toxic materials in streams and rivers in and around Johannesburg, where there has been gold mining for 130 years.

The metropolis lies in the middle of the Witwatersrand basin, the source of a third of all bullion the world has yet produced.

Farmers have complained of pollution from coal mines in Mpumalanga province, west of the city.

Segalwe was unable to provide more information as to which companies, state institutions or people were being investigated and declined to discuss potential outcomes.

Of the country’s working mines, almost 40 percent don’t have adequate funds for environmental rehabilitation, according to the government.

Companies including Glencore operate collieries in Mpumalanga.

AngloGold Ashanti, the world’s third-biggest producer of the metal, has mines in South Africa.

The Public Protector is a state body independent of government set up through the nation’s constitution to root out corruption and improve how public servants work.

 

Criminal Complaint

 

The Federation for a Sustainable Environment, an environmental lobby group, laid a criminal complaint against the directors of mining companies including AngloGold, Exxaro Resources and Glencore because the Department of Water Affairs allegedly failed to enforce environmental regulations, according to Mariette Liefferink, the FSE’s chief executive officer.

The Public Protector contacted the FSE after reading about the issue in a newspaper, Liefferink said.

“It’s extremely encouraging and heartening that the public protector approached us about this issue,” she said by phone on May 20.

Exxaro, the country’s third-biggest coal producer, has been approached by the police about the complaint, spokesman Hilton Atkinson said by e-mail yesterday.

The FSE in 2012 laid a separate complaint about Exxaro’s Glisa coal mine outside Belfast in the Mpumalanga province that led to the Department of Water Affairs issuing a directive against the operation, he said.

The nation’s High Court subsequently suspended the order, Atkinson said.

 

Fully Co-Operate

 

AngloGold will co-operate fully with authorities on the matter, spokesman Chris Nthite said in an e-mail.

The complaint was laid against its Mine Waste Solutions unit that the gold producer bought in July 2012.

“The complaints have been brought without justification,” Glencore spokesman Gugulethu Maqetuka said in an e-mail.

The company, which will work with authorities, said the mine in question operates within all requirements of the Water Act.

The Public Protector is led by Thuli Madonsela, who was named last month as one of Time Magazine’s 100 most-influential people after finding that President Jacob Zuma unduly benefited from state-funded upgrades to his private residence.

She recommended he repay the 215 million rand of taxpayers’ money spent on his home in Nkandla. Zuma has denied any wrongdoing.

The Public Protector acts to “strengthen constitutional democracy by investigating and redressing improper and prejudicial conduct, maladministration and abuse of power in state affairs,” according to its website. - Bloomberg News

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