EMA launches blitz on illegal miners

21 Dec, 2018 - 00:12 0 Views
EMA launches blitz on illegal miners

eBusiness Weekly

Business Writer
The agency’s environmental inspectors descended on artisan miners at Manyama area resulting in cat and mouse battles.

It is reported that the proliferation of illegal gold panners has resulted in open pits, which are dangerous to both humans and livestock.

Said EMA’s acting manager Somandla Ndlovu; “It is illegal for gold miners to simply obtain mining certificates and undertake the mining process without EIA certificates.

“We are conducting spot checks at all mines in the area with police. Some of the gold miners recently fled upon our arrival.

“It is our strong message to the mining sector that our operations as EMA are premised on environmental precautionary principle of sustainable development.

Therefore, anyone who possesses a mining certificate without  accompanying certificate from EMA remains an illegal operator (miner),” he said.

Mandatory fines for illegal gold miners were currently pegged between $10 to $5 000 depending on severity of environmental degradation caused, which determines the level of offence.

Ndlovu said environmental crimes are crimes against the state and should not be condoned in any way.

“We value the integrity of the environment. The trees which the gold miners curt when mining need to be replaced.’’

“Livestock and humans also have a high risk of falling into the open pits which are left by the miners.

“To award gold miners with EIA  certificates we look at proximity of the miners in relation to human settlements  and other  key infrastructures  such as roads, the availability of ambulation facilities, stakeholders consultation by the holder of the mining certificate and their future plans after exhausting the mineral among other factors,” he said.

He said so far they had awarded EIA certificates to 107 gold miners in Masvingo province.

He said they are conducting regular compliance monitoring progresses around most projects in the area.

‘‘For instance, they are using cyanide we check on what they do to ensure that the chemical will not endanger livestock, humans and the environment,’’ said Ndlovu.

Masvingo District Administrator Roy Hove, who chairs the local Civil Protection Unit, said the illegal miners deserved punitive fines or alternatively imprisonment.

‘‘We have been receiving several reports, where children drown in those disused mining pits, especially during the rainy season.

“We also encourage those who have met all the environmental specifications to bury their pits instead of leaving them open,’’ he said.

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