Mining community action group pickets outside Mining Lekgotla

27th August 2013 By: Samantha Herbst - Creamer Media Deputy Editor

JOHANNESBURG (miningweekly.com) – About 150 members from a community action group gathered outside the Sandton Convention Centre on Tuesday to picket for the rights of mining-affected communities in South Africa, as day one of the second annual Mining Lekgotla was under way.

The newly formed Mining Affected Communities United in Action (Macua) were calling on government to consider the demands and interests of affected communities as it reviewed mining legislation and policy changes, such as the draft Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act (MPRDA) Amendment Bill.

It also asked that the Chamber of Mines liaise more with communities.

Further, according to Macua Gauteng spokesperson Toto Nzamo, the organisation put in a formal request with Mining Lekgotla chairperson Dr Thuthula Balfour-Kaipa two weeks ago for 40 community representatives to be allowed entrance to the event – a request that has yet to be met, says Nzamo.

In an open letter to Deputy President Kgalema Motlanthe, who provided the post-lunch keynote address, the community rights group cited the draft framework agreement for sustainable mining, spearheaded by Motlanthe, which states the need for all mining stakeholders in South Africa to “work together to put in place processes that will bring about real changes”.

Macua believed that the trend of excluding mining-affected communities from problem-solving dialogues and “attempts to seek a lasting resolution to the conflicts within the mining sector” were ongoing.

“The historical and continued exclusion of communities affected by mining from discussion on economic and social development, which seeks real change does not advance stability in the sector and reinforces the alienation of communities, which will inevitably lead to further conflict in the sector,” stated Macua in the open letter.

The group further claimed that communities have been “systematically excluded” from the adoption of the Mining Charter, in which “only the interests of business, government and labour have been addressed”, which contradicts government’s commitment to transforming the mining sector through economic and social development.

Macua argued that a lasting solution to problems inherent in the mining sector could not be achieved without the full participation of communities affected by mining.