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Court Rules Against Police Blockade Of Illegal Miners

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On Saturday, a South African court called for an end to the police barricade at an abandoned gold mining site, where it is suspected that a significant number of illegal miners—potentially in the thousands—are taking refuge or continuing their activities below ground.

For several days, police officers and ambulances have maintained a presence at the site in Stilfontein, located roughly 140 kilometers (90 miles) southwest of Johannesburg, as efforts to manage the situation continue.

Police called in experts on Saturday to assess the safety of the mine shafts to help decide if officers could carry out a forced evacuation, police spokesperson Athlenda Mathe told reporters.

But the court order effectively rules out that option.

The Pretoria court order said: “The mine shaft in Stilfontein… shall be unblocked and may not be blocked by any person or institution whether government or private.

“Any miners trapped in the mine shaft shall be permitted to exit; no non-emergency personnel may enter the mine shaft,” the judge added.

Earlier this week, a local claimed to have been told there were around 4,000 miners underground.

Police, speaking earlier this week, said the figure was probably in the hundreds, but the illegal miners faced arrest if they came to the surface. On Thursday, a body was brought out of the mine.

The police operation had also cut off supplies of food and water to the underground miners.

On Wednesday, minister in the presidency Khumbudzo Ntshavheni told reporters the government did not intend to step in.

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“Honestly, we’re not sending help to criminals, we’re going to smoke them out. They will come out,” she said, with her comments drawing sharp criticism from the opposition.

Since a police operation launched weeks ago to force miners out of the shaft, more than 1,170 people have resurfaced, police spokesperson Mathe told reporters earlier this week.

She said then that the authorities had wanted the miners to leave but would not go down into the shaft it believed was unsafe because of hazardous gases and the possibility some miners had weapons.

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