Mining Mirror March 2018 | Page 21

More and more women entered mines as underground workers after 1994 and today, an estimated 1 837 women are employed underground. Mining in focus I vividly remember my first crawl in a stope. I was a third-year student doing holiday work for Mponeng’s Communications Department. In the changeroom, before our plunge, I agonised over the holes on the sides of my overalls, how the heavy battery pack hurt my hip bones, and how I might trip in my oversized gumboots. Shaking down a chain ladder, I kept my fear to myself, barely containing the onset of a panic attack in the depths of the Witwatersrand’s narrow reefs. The experience etched my first understanding of the marvels and the mechanical genius of underground gold mining. It also made me grasp, if only partially, what it took to daily do a 3km drop in an overcrowded cage, considering the exhaustion, muscle ache, extreme heat, and prospect of injury and death that came with the territory. I framed my perspective of underground mining solely from the notion that “this must be incredibly tough for men”. Granted, it was 2002 and female mine workers were still a sparse minority then. – Nicola Theunissen, 2017 Although the number of women employed in high-skilled jobs, such as chemical engineers and geologists, has increased exponentially, only 1 837 women are currently working in low-paid, unskilled jobs in the underground mines of South Africa. MARCH 2018 MINING MIRROR [19]