Mining Mirror November 2018 | Page 3

Comment Cyril’s dangerous dance with the dragon Get in touch @LeonLouw3 [email protected] www.miningmirror.co.za A fter spending four days at the beginning of September trudging through the halls and walkways of the Nasrec showgrounds, trying to contemplate where the mining industry in Africa is heading, I was left, yet again, with sore toes, a headache, and — none the wiser. The Electra Mining Exhibition happens every two years, and I can never remember whether the previous one had been busier and more crowded, and if the sun had been as hot during lunchtime, while waiting for my boerewors roll and chips. To be fair, though, I do remember the rows and rows of almost deserted Chinese stands. They have been there forever, and they seem to be growing in number each time I set foot (by this time, blistered) in the lair of the Red Dragon. Nevertheless, I normally try to avoid this hall for as long as possible, because it seems as if these exhibitors do not share my enthusiasm (even if it is a wee bit pretentious) to strike up a conversation. Whether it is because they do not speak English, or because I do not speak Mandarin, or because of the great cultural divide, I mostly get ignored, no matter how hard I try to look interested in what they are punting. So, it was only on the last day of Electra Mining, after lunch, that I entered the abode of the Celestial Empire. The reason I get ignored, I concluded, is probably since my nametag says MEDIA on it, in big bold letters. I have decided that if there is one thing that my BRICS cohorts do understand in English, it is this five-letter word, and it scares the living daylights out of them. Not that they are to blame. It is well known that the Chinese government is blatantly media averse and this phobia seems to have rubbed off on even the friendliest of Chinese business person. I have experienced this phenomenon across Africa. It is near impossible to access any information from, let alone interview or photograph, the managers or CEOs of Chinese companies doing business on the continent. At lunchtime on the last day of Electra Mining, I added extra chilli sauce and mustard to my roll and read reels and reels of articles about the South African government’s new romance with President Xi Jinping and his Chinese allies. Big loans, new deals, large Chinese cities in Limpopo — of all places. Isn’t that Juju’s stomping grounds? What will he say? I started trembling and broke into a cold sweat. Could it have been the chilli? Whatever the cause, one thing is for sure: President Cyril Ramaphosa’s flirtation with Jinping, according to some, might save the sinking ship. But, my-oh-my, I see dark days for the media in South Africa. But then, maybe the Chinese model of no-free-speech and shut-out-the-media-at-all-costs fits the South African government (and some in the business community) like a glove. After all, was it not the media that caused the Zuma and Jooste house of cards to come tumbling down? If there is one thing that the Chinese companies (and Ramaphosa) will have to realise, it is that the media in South Africa won’t be muzzled, like in many other African countries. A vibrant and free media has been the foundation of South Africa’s young democracy, and not even the strongest of its BRICS partners will change that. In-between tasty bites of boerewors rolls, admiring a few new mining innovations and pondering the meaning of it all, I decided that this year I would make a mental note of the great show. There was more than enough to get excited about. Most visitors and exhibitors were optimistic about mining, even in South Africa. And who knows, come Electra Mining 2020, I might be able to say more than one word in Mandarin — something everybody in South Africa should consider doing. Leon Editor NOVEMBER 2018 MINING MIRROR [1]