Solarion
Honorary Master
- Joined
- Nov 14, 2012
- Messages
- 28,051
- Reaction score
- 17,804
[-]Illegal miner[/-]
[-]Taxi boss[/-]
[-]Farmer[/-]
[-]White business owner[/-]
[-]Immigrant[/-]
South Africa’s biggest forum. Discuss, discover, and connect with thousands of members.
[-]Illegal miner[/-]
[-]Taxi boss[/-]
[-]Farmer[/-]
[-]White business owner[/-]
Rival illegal miner war?
A 51-year-old woman sustained serious injuries this morning after she fell down an illegal goldmine on a plantation near the White River Sabie Road, 60 Kilometres outside of Nelspruit.
ER24 paramedics, as well as SAPS Search and Rescue, were alerted to the incident and immediately responded to the plantation.
Once on scene, ER24 paramedics were shown to the illegal mine shaft where the woman had fallen into.
ER24 paramedics and SAPS began setting up their specialised rescue equipment that they would use to lower a paramedic down the 15 metre shaft. Once lowered into the shaft, they found the patient lying on her back in a serious condition. Assessments showed that the patient had sustained serious injuries and fractures to both her upper and lower legs.
Paramedics treated the patient and provided her with advanced life support treatment. Once the patient was stabilise, she was brought to the surface and loaded into an awaiting ER24 ambulance and transported to Mediclinic Nelspruit for urgent medical treatment.
Local authorities were on scene for further investigations.



ER24 paramedics, as well as SAPS Search and Rescue, were alerted to the incident and immediately responded to the plantation.


Five illegal miners have died after being trapped underground since Thursday evening, when the 90m-deep Bosveld Mine in Pongola, in northern KwaZulu-Natal, collapsed.
It is alleged that there were 13 illegal gold miners inside the isolated mine in the hilly and dusty village of Klipwal, when it caved in.
Of the 13 miners, three were arrested for illegal mining and are scheduled to appear in court on Monday, five fled, and the remaining five were trapped and subsequently died. It appears that the miners are from Lesotho.
It's believed that the miners who fled alerted people in the village about the trapped miners they had left behind.
After a search that took just over two hours yesterday, the rescue team led by Jack Haskins, that included K9 rescue services, a dog search unit squad and medical personnel, called off their search.
Haskins said it was too dangerous to continue with the search, as the mine was riddled with cracks and rockfalls: “I can’t put my team at risk.
”After the search, the rescue team concluded that all five miners trapped were dead, as there were no human responses from a distance of about 20m. Shortly after emerging from the mine, Haskins told Independent Media: “It’s a rest in peace for them now. We can’t do anything there.”
Previously, Haskins had said they could talk to the one miner from a distance, through a barricade of rocks.
A search team member who chose not to be named said that on Friday morning they could still talk to the trapped miner, although he responded with a “fainted voice”.
“He told us that the other miners were dead. And he pleaded for help, but we couldn’t get to him.