Joburg mayor sounds alarm on illegal mining threat in State of the City Address

South Africa Johannesburg SOCA- 02 May 2024. The state of the city address for the city of Johannesburg by Cllr Kabelo Gwamanda. Picture: Timothy Bernard / Independent Newspapers.

South Africa Johannesburg SOCA- 02 May 2024. The state of the city address for the city of Johannesburg by Cllr Kabelo Gwamanda. Picture: Timothy Bernard / Independent Newspapers.

Published May 2, 2024

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In his State of the City Address, Joburg Mayor Kabelo Gwamanda, addressed the scourge of illegal mining, known as zama zamas, gripping the heart of Johannesburg.

Despite celebrating strides in economic growth and service delivery, Gwamanda highlighted the insidious threat posed by these illicit operations.

Gwamanda delivered his address at the Council Chambers in Braamfontein, Johannesburg, on Thursday.

The mayor explained that zama zamas have posed a severe threat to Joburg’s infrastructure, the environment, financial stability of the metro and especially, the safety of locals.

“Illegal mining involves tunnelling under roadways, excavating bridge embankments while also infringing on crucial water and sewage networks that is placing a real risk and threat to residents and infrastructure in the city,” said Gwamanda.

The mayor stated that illegal mining has affected the water and road systems particularly in Joburg’s central, south and west regions. “The pollution of rivers as well as potential cross-contamination present severe health risks to local residents, who depend on pure drinking water for their well-being.

“The unlawful activities of zama zamas involve disruptive excavation, which leads to soil erosion around pipelines. This accelerates the possibility of sinkholes and severely undermines both our infrastructure’s stability and safety standards for repair teams,” said the mayor.

Moreover, he said the Johannesburg Roads Agency (JRA) is taking initiative to keep residents safe from damaged roads and excavations due to zama zamas and avoid further infrastructure dilapidation, by the use of barricades and road closures.

Also, the community of Riverlea continues to live in fear as the suburb is infested with gun violence and gangsterism from illegal miners. Hence, the city has deployed Johannesburg Metropolitan Police Department (JMPD) and the police in order to safeguard residents and apprehend perpetrators of those involved in terrorising community members and partake in illegal mining.

The mayor added that the metro is taking a financial knock. “The city’s financial situation is deeply affected by illegal mining in a complex and significant manner. Costs range from repairs necessitated by damage to water, or sewage systems; replacing entire pipes that have been damaged beyond repair and restoring terrain ravaged through quarrying activities,” said Gwamanda.

The Star

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