In the North West Province of South Africa, one of a group of illegal miners (zama zamas, or “those who take a chance” in Zulu) in the Stilfontein mine (which closed in 2013) has disclosed that he and his fellow miners turned to cannibalism when they ran out of food 2km (1.25 miles) underground.

There are thousands of abandoned mine shafts where miners can search for a tiny remnants of the gold that made South Africa rich. While it is no longer profitable for mining multinationals, traces of gold remain. The miners were digging in the abandoned gold mine when, in August 2024, the police decided to “smoke them out” by cutting off their food, water and medical supplies as part of Operation “Vala Umgodi,” or “close the hole.”
Speaking to SABC, one of the miners told a news station that from the second week of August 2024, his fellow miners had to resort to eating flies, cockroaches and other insects. As their situation worsened, more drastic measures were taken. Video from the rescuers showed the emaciated condition of the miners.

He said the idea of eating human flesh started as a joke but proved prophetic.
“One man was told that he was going to be eaten as a joke, and it ended up happening … we did not think it would ever get to the extent where would eat dead bodies or corpses. It really happened. People were eaten.”
On 10 January 2025, more than two months after news of the crisis at Stilfontein had emerged, the Pretoria High Court ordered the government to launch a rescue operation. “We do not want a situation where this will be marked as the darkest point in our history,” the Judge said in his ruling. Allegations that the miners resorted to eating human flesh in order to survive were also made by other miners who were rescued in December, in statements submitted to the High Court.
This news comes as the world watches on. South Africa’s sanctimonious posturing in the International Court of Justice in the Hague does not conceal its abhorrent domestic maltreatment of immigrants and citizens. Activist groups claim that there were gross human rights abuses and State-sanctioned murder at Stilfontein.

It seems that the fact that most of the zama zamas are Mozambicans and Zimbabweans has been a major factor in the government’s hard-line approach. Many ordinary South Africans have been unmoved by their plight, with countless comments on social media platforms saying they should be left to die. In South Africa, it seems that Black Lives don’t Matter.
The South African Federation of Trade Unions (SAFTU) stated that the deaths of the Stilfontein illegal miners bear similarities to the Marikina massacre in 2012, where 34 miners were shot in a premeditated act of state violence. The SAFTU general secretary, Zwelinzima Vavi, said:
“In Stilfontein, hunger has been used as a weapon to achieve the same deadly outcome”
The operation to retrieve the zama zamas ended up with 78 people declared dead and with 246 rescued. Some civic groups are calling for a commission of inquiry or even for murder charges to be brought against the state, but the police have vowed Operation Vala Umgodi will continue.

Specialized machinery was needed to lower a cage down to bring up the men and the bodies. No police or rescue workers would go down, saying the risks were too high, so it was left to volunteers from the local township to undertake the devastating task.
As the cage reached a depth of 1,280 meters, rescuers Mandla Charles and Mzwandile Mkwayi were confronted with scenes that, they say, will haunt them forever. Hundreds of emaciated miners, some near death, lay together with dozens of dead bodies. Mkwayi said that the men he rescued were so frail that the rescue cage, only meant to carry seven healthy adults, could take 13 of them.
As Mkwayi was lowered into the South African mine, the first thing that struck him was the smell. Charles said:
“The smell of death was everywhere”

When he got home later that day, he told his wife he could not eat the meat she had cooked.
“It’s because when I spoke to the miners, they told me some of them had to eat other [people] inside the mine because there was no way they could find food. And they were also eating cockroaches”
Another reminder, if we needed one, that humans are made of the same flesh as other mammals. If you starve us, do we not die? If we die, do we not rot? And if you’re hungry, are we not meat?
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