Workers at a mine. Small-scale gold miners in East Africa are being
trained by Fairtrade Foundation, a UK-based charity organisation, to
embrace safe working practices and eradicate child labour at mining
sites. PHOTO | FILE
By KENNEDY SENELWA
Posted Saturday, March 26 2016 at 11:37
Posted Saturday, March 26 2016 at 11:37
In Summary
- Small-scale gold miners in East Africa are being trained by Fairtrade Foundation, a UK-based charity organisation, to embrace safe working practices and eradicate child labour at mining sites.
- Fairtrade standards include protecting the environment by minimising use of mercury, promoting personal safety equipment, eliminating child labour and promoting better working conditions and equal treatment of men and women.
- Fairtrade said it received a $1.2 million grant from Comic Relief to support the world’s first responsible sourcing of gold from the nine ASMOs. The grant will run till 2019.
Small-scale gold miners in East Africa are being trained by
Fairtrade Foundation, a UK-based charity organisation, to embrace safe
working practices and eradicate child labour at mining sites.
Fairtrade said an initiative to minimise life threatening
incidents associated with dangerous mining sites has brought artisanal
and small-scale mining organisations (ASMSOs) from Kenya, Uganda and
Tanzania on board.
Fairtrade standards include protecting the environment by
minimising use of mercury, promoting personal safety equipment,
eliminating child labour and promoting better working conditions and
equal treatment of men and women.
Miners are required to extract gold from crushed ore using
mercury in concrete pits to ensure toxins do not reach rivers and
waterways.
Mercury attracts all the gold particles in the ore. When mercury
is consumed by a human being, it accumulates in the kidney, liver, skin
and lungs, causing permanent disability with a range of other
conditions.
The Micodepro Development Group in Migori and the Lolgorian
ASMSO Group in Transmara in western Kenya are among the first
associations to be trained under the African Gold Programme.
Umoja Lwamgasa Saccos, Nsangano Gold Mine Project and Mawemeru
Gold Project in Tanzania along with Uganda’s Busia United Small Scale
Mining Association, Syanyonja Artisan Miners Alliance, Tiira Small Scale
Mining Association and Buteba Small Scale Mining Association are
beneficiaries of the training programme.
Fairtrade said it received a $1.2 million grant from Comic
Relief to support the world’s first responsible sourcing of gold from
the nine ASMSOs. The grant will run till 2019.
“The situation faced by small-scale miners has no place in
supply chain. We are working to create a business model and renewed
support,” said Fairtrade’s chief executive Michael Gidney.
Upon being certified, the ASMSOs will get $2,000 premium per
kilogramme of gold and a minimum of 95 per cent of the London Bullion
Market Association (LBMA) price of precious metal sold.
London-based Fairtrade said money received by any ASMSO as a
premium for having fair working conditions has to be invested in
improving the welfare of the local community around the mining site.
“Once certification is achieved by the initial nine ASMSOs in
East Africa, the gold will be imported into Britain by Cred Jewellery in
readiness for sale by the Arctic Circle, Cred Jewellery and Mastercut
brands,” it said.
The Fairtrade certification process can be traced to individual
miners who get a fair price for gold and money to improve their living
conditions. Certification will be done after training and a rigorous
auditing process.
“From 2016, the new grant will support miners’ ability to invest
in their own development, become more productive and deliver sales to
global markets over four years,” said Fairtrade’s media manager, Martine
Parry.
She said Nsangano and Syanyonja Artisan Miners Alliance with
Micodepro will become model ASMSO sites as they exhibited improved
mining practices, strong leadership and good practice in phase one of
the project.
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