South African miners preparing settlement for lung disease claims
Mining NE reported that South African mining firms including Anglo American are preparing a multimillion dollar settlement with as many as 100 000 former workers who suffer from debilitating and deadly lung diseases caused by exposure to dust from working underground.
Anglo has set aside USD 101 million in preparation for a potential settlement, while Gold Fields expects to pay about USD 30 million to end a class action lawsuit, the companies said in separate statements Thursday. AngloGold Ashanti, Sibanye Gold and Harmony Gold Mining are among 32 respondents named in the suit, which would be the country’s biggest class action.
Mr Richard Spoor, a lawyer representing claimants, said in a phone interview that “Significant progress has been made towards a settlement, such that companies are feeling comfortable enough to quantify their liabilities. It’s still a process but I’m fairly optimistic we will be able to conclude something within the course of this year.”
A settlement would bring an end to almost a decade-long fight by Spoor to compensate the hundreds of thousands of mine workers who contracted silicosis, a lung disease caused by silica dust, while working in South Africa’s gold mines as far back as the 1950s. Under the apartheid government, there was little protection for workers who say they were often left in mines while blasting took place and were frequently coated in the deadly dust.
Spoor, who runs his own law firm, is financially backed by Motley Rice LLC, a legal powerhouse based in Charleston, South Carolina and which won a USD 246 billion settlement from the tobacco industry in 1998. Spoor has won a settlement to compensate asbestosis sufferers who incurred the disease while mining the mineral in South Africa decades ago.
South Africa’s High Court last year ruled that there was enough evidence of unsafe working practices to allow a class action case to proceed and that as many as 500 000 former workers could be included. Given the difficulty in tracking down claimants and proving their employment history, the eventual figure is likely to be less than 100 000, Spoor said.
Under white minority rule, which ended in 1994, most gold mines operated a migrant labor system, with workers coming from remote rural areas and neighboring African countries such as Mozambique and Lesotho.
Mr Spoor said that any settlement would include family members of those deceased, as long as they can prove damages.
Source : Miningne.ws