A gold rush has gripped an informal settlement east of the South African city of Johannesburg, after reports spread a few days ago about the discovery of some gold particles. A resident in a poor neighbourhood of the former mining town of Springs claimed to have found several nuggets while digging at an outdoor enclosure used for cattle. Dozens of people have now descended on the area and have been digging up the fenced area where the cows were once penned in, hoping to strike it rich.
Armed with pickaxes and shovels, they have been sifting through the soil in scenes reminiscent of the gold rush that helped built South Africa’s financial capital more than a century ago. Springs was once a booming gold town, but its mines were closed several years ago because the extreme depth of the shafts made operations uneconomical. The town is now surrounded by informal settlements many of whose residents are migrants from neighbouring countries.
South Africa’s Department of Mineral Resources has condemned this week’s mining activity in Spring’s informal settle of Gugulethu, calling it illegal and warning that it is damaging the environment. Some of those digging at the site have told the BBC that they have been able to find gold and have sold it on the black market. Dangerous chemicals like mercury and sodium cyanide are used to separate the gold from the ore.
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“We know this is illegal. We want the government to give us mining permits so we can work and pay tax,” one man, who did not want to be named, told the BBC.
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