Security9.09.2022

Police getting specialised force to fight illegal mining

South African police officers SAPS

The South African Police Service will establish a specialised force to combat illegal mining that’s robbing the nation of revenue and hampering operations at mineral companies.

The new security force will be a “multi-disciplinary unit” between the SAPS and the Department of Mineral Resources and Energy, Gwede Mantashe, the energy, minerals and resource minister told lawmakers in Cape Town on Thursday.

Illegal mining has long been a problem in South Africa. That’s now been coupled with thefts of equipment.

The criminal activity affects vital infrastructure from railways to telecommunications to utilities, undermining President Cyril Ramaphosa’s efforts to revive the economy.

The thefts and illegal mining have become increasingly lucrative with prices of metals such as copper surging.

The illegal miners are the “foot soldiers of organised crime,” and their widespread use of derelict and abandoned mines was a ‘’war on the South African economy,” Mantashe said.

Now read: 400 abandoned coal mines in South Africa endanger nearby communities

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