About 30 killed in landslide at Chad gold mine

Reference image of artisanal miners in the DRC. Photo from Wikimedia Commons.

A landslide at an illegal gold mine in Chad has killed about 30 people, a government minister said on Thursday.

The mine in the Tibesti region near the Libyan border collapsed early on Tuesday and more victims might still be buried in the rubble, defence minister Mahamat Sala told Reuters.

Tibesti has witnessed rapid growth in illegal mining in recent years, often by refugees from Sudan looking for quick money to head to Europe or by rebels fighting the army.

Unsafe methods and a lack of oversight mean accidents are common at such mines in Africa, where impoverished communities seek a share of the vast resources that are usually dug up by international companies, processed and sent overseas.

Last June, more than 40 people died when part of a Glencore copper and cobalt mine collapsed in southeast Congo.

(By Madjiasra Nako, Juliette Jabkhiro and Edward McAllister; Editing by Aaron Ross, Toby Chopra and Giles Elgood)

Comments

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *