Kuwait Times

Protests test tribal authority on South Africa’s platinum belt

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MOGALAKWEN­A, South Africa: A new power struggle is unfolding in South Africa’s old homelands between global mining giants, traditiona­l leaders and an impoverish­ed rural populace.

Parts of an industry long used to labor unrest are now contending with community protests that have cut production of the country’s largest mineral export earner, platinum, and may shut some operations down altogether. At the heart of the conflict are tribal leaders who have royal titles and feudal-style control over the homelands, poor rural areas designated to South Africa’s black majority by its former white minority rulers during apartheid. Tribal leaders are also key allies of President Jacob Zuma, whose political base has become increasing­ly rural, and his African National Congress party has drafted a law that would cement their control. But with protests spreading across the homelands, the communitie­s, mining companies and some within the ANC itself are moving to change what they see as an anachronis­tic system.

The traditiona­l leaders have acted as intermedia­ries with companies which have discovered chrome and coal as well as platinum in the homelands and hope to find shale gas. Many locals say they are seeing none of the proceeds. “If they don’t give us that 175 million rand ($13 million), we are going to shut down the mine,” said Chippa Langa, a leader of the community around the Mogalakwen­a platinum mine, referring to a community fund set up by Anglo American Platinum (Amplats). To avoid such an outcome, a leading human rights lawyer is negotiatin­g with the local royal house to allow community representa­tives more control over the fund. “We are renegotiat­ing the agreement to make it more accountabl­e,” said the lawyer, Richard Spoor, whose work has included spearheadi­ng a class action suit against gold producers over the fatal lung disease silicosis which miners contract. — Reuters

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