Mali gold mine collapse sees dozens killed

9 months ago 16
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A Malian gold panner coming out of an underground mine at an artisanal gold mining site in Sadiola (north-western Mali). Gold attracts many young people from the region (Ghana, Guinee, Burkina-Faso, Senegal..) to its mining sites where gold panners use rudimentary means for its exploitation.Image source, Getty Images

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Mining accidents are common in Mali due to unregulated practices

By Danai Nesta Kupemba

BBC News

At least 40 people have been killed when a tunnel collapsed in a gold mine in Mali, officials say.

"It started with a noise. The earth started to shake," Oumar Sidibe, a local official for gold miners told the AFP news agency.

The tunnel collapsed at a site in the south-western Koulikoro region on Friday but the number of deaths had not been reported until now.

AFP quotes officials as saying that more than 70 people died.

Mali's ministry of mines has confirmed the accident, but has not disclosed how many people were killed.

Ministry spokesperson Baye Coulibaly told Reuters news agency that more than 40 artisanal miners had lost their lives.

Mr Sidibe said: "There were over 200 gold miners in the field. The search is over now. We've found 73 bodies."

Mali's government expressed "deepest condolences to the grieving families and to the Malian people".

It also asked communities living near mining sites to adhere to safety requirements and to only work in areas reserved for gold panning.

Mining accidents are common in the country as most unregulated miners use unsafe methods to dig for gold.

Mr Coulibaly said the ministry had strongly advised miners against digging unauthorised tunnels, but that it had been "in vain".

The ministry said they would investigate the incident further and send a team to the area on Thursday.

Mali is one of the world's biggest exporters of gold.

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