Trapped underground with decaying bodies, miners faced a dark reality » Capital News


As Mzwandile Mkwayi was lowered into the South African mine in a red metal cage attached to a hoist above ground, the first thing that struck him was the smell.

“Let me tell you something,” he tells the BBC, “those bodies really smelled bad”.

When he got home later that day, he told his wife he could not eat the meat she had cooked.

“It’s because when I spoke to the miners, they told me some of them had to eat other [people] inside the mine because there was no way they could find food. And they were also eating cockroaches,” he said on a phone call from his home.

Allegations that the miners resorted to eating human flesh in order to survive were also made by other miners who were rescued in December, in statements submitted to the high court.

Mkwayi, a former convict, known locally as Shasha, lives in the township of Khuma that was close to the disused mine in Stilfontein. The 36-year-old, who had served seven years in prison for robbery, volunteered to go down to help with the rescue effort.

“I’m being rehabilitated by the correctional services and I volunteered because people in our community were seeking help for their children and brothers.

“The rescue company said they didn’t have anyone who wanted to go down. So my friend Mandla and I agreed to volunteer so we could help our brothers to resurface and bring up the dead bodies.”

But even though he wanted to help, the 25-minute journey down the 2km (1.2 mile)-deep shaft filled him with terror.

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The crane would occasionally stop and start, leaving him dangling in the darkness. Once he got down into the mine, he was shocked by what he saw.

“There were lots of bodies, over 70 bodies, and around 200 or so people that were dehydrated.

“I felt very weak when I saw them, it was a painful thing to see. But Mandla and I decided we needed to be strong and not show them how we felt so we could motivate them.”

This story contains a video that some people may find distressing.

The miners who had been waiting for help for months, gave them a hero’s welcome.

“They were very, very happy,” he says.

The miners had been stuck there following a nationwide police operation to end illicit mining at disused sites that had closed, as the industry – once the backbone of the country’s economy – was shrinking.

It was no longer profitable for mining multinationals to operate in many places, but the promise of still finding gold deposits was a magnet for many desperate people – particularly undocumented migrants.

Thousands of shafts were abandoned.

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In November, police stepped up efforts at the Buffelsfontein mine in Stilfontein, surrounding the entrance to the shaft and refusing to let food and water go down.

Before the rescue operation began on Monday, the local community had tried to take matters into their own hands by lowering a rope down the shaft to try and pull out some of the men.

They also sent down messages and told the miners that help was coming.

“So when we got there, they were already waiting for the crane. Now when they see us, they see us as their presidents, as their messiahs: the people that came from outside into the hole to help them to resurface.”

The police say the illegal miners were always able to come out on their own but were refusing to do so because they feared arrest. But Mkwayi disagrees: “It’s a lie that people didn’t want to come out. Those people were desperate for help, they were dying.”

While at the mine site on Tuesday, the BBC saw dozens of the rescued men.

They appeared emaciated, their bones visible through their clothes. Some could barely walk and had to be helped by medical staff.

In statements submitted to the high court, the illegal miners describe in graphic details the slow and painful death of their peers. They say many died of starvation.

“From September through October 2024, the absence of even basic sustenance was absolute, and survival became a daily battle against starvation,” one miner was recorded as saying.

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Mkwayi says the men he rescued were so frail that the rescue cage that is only meant to carry seven healthy adults could take 13 of them.

“They were very dehydrated and had lost weight so we managed to fit more into the cage, because they wouldn’t have survived another two days down in the hole. They would be dead if we didn’t get them out as soon as possible.”

The volunteers were also in charge of bringing up dead bodies.

“The rescue services gave us bags and told us to put the bodies in them and bring them up in the cage which we did with the help of some of the miners.”

The rescue operation was initially meant to last at least a week, but after just three days, the volunteers said no-one was left underground.

The authorities sent a camera down the shaft to do a final sweep. They say the mine will now be permanently sealed.

But the experience has deeply impacted Mkwayi.

At one point during the call he asks for a question to be repeated, explaining that his hearing has been affected since going down into the mine, presumably by the pressure.

But the hardest impact has been from what he witnessed.

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“I have to tell you, I am traumatised. I will never forget the sight of these people for the rest of my life.”

For activists and trade unions helping the community, the death of the 87 people in the mine amounts to a “massacre” perpetrated by the authorities.

The use of the emotive word has drawn comparisons with the shooting dead by police of 34 striking miners in Marikana, some 150km (93 miles) away from Stilfontein, in 2012.

But this time no triggers were pulled. Instead it seems many of the men starved to death.

The authorities reject the idea they were responsible.





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