Download and Use This Podcast In Three Easy Steps
- If your browser is Internet Explorer: Right-click the Download button and choose 'Save Target As'. If your browser is Mozilla Firefox or Google Chrome: Right-click the Download button and choose 'Save Link As'. If your browser is Safari: Right-click the Download button and choose 'Download Linked File As'.
- Send an email to [email protected] to let us know that you are using this podcast.
- Please acknowledge SACSIS - The South African Civil Society Information Service (www.sacsis.org.za) as the source of this podcast when you use it.
Copyright: Some Rights Reserved
SACSIS podcasts are licensed under a Creative Commons License. You are free to share, copy, and remix the work as long as the work is attributed to SACSIS. Please do acknowledge SACSIS - The South African Civil Society Information Service (www.sacsis.org.za) as the source of this podcast.
Less Information
John Capel of the Bench Marks Foundation talks about the efforts of his organisation to widen the scope of the Marikana Commission of Inquiry (also known as the Farlam Commission), such that the investigation goes beyond and behind the killings of the 34 striking mineworkers, which shocked the world last year, to the socio-economic root causes of the strikes in the Rustenburg mining belt.
A study by the Bench Marks Foundation, first released in 2007 and later updated in 2011, shows huge disparities between what mining companies are saying about their investments into communities and what is actually being developed.
The Foundation's research reveals communities in the Rustenburg mining belt living in a toxic soup of waters poisoned by sulphur dioxide spills and high levels of emissions let out into the air. The health burden this places onto an already impoverished community pushes them to breaking point.
Add to this cracked houses from blast mining, high HIV statistics, respiratory diseases and massive social problems related to a migrant labour system that harks back to the apartheid era, which directly contradict the slick social responsibility advertorials and reports sent out by the mining companies.
Capel is hopeful that with the right pressure, the Farlam Commission will investigate these disparities and force corporate accountability.
Should you wish to repost this SACSIS video, air this podcast or republish this transcript please acknowledge The South African Civil Society Information Service as its source.
All of SACSIS' originally produced articles, videos, podcasts and transcripts are licensed under a Creative Commons license.
For more information about our Copyright Policy, please click here.
To receive an email notification when a new SACSIS video is released, please click here.
For regular and timely updates of new SACSIS articles, you can also follow us on Twitter @SACSIS_News and/or become a SACSIS fan on Facebook.
Read more articles filed under Videos.
Read more articles tagged with:
marikana massacre, mining, SACSIS TV, socio-economic rights.
You can find this page online at http://sacsis.org.za/site/article/1656.