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Article

18 Aug 2023

Author:
Dieketseng Maleke, IOL (South Africa)

S. Africa: Current and former coal miners who contracted chronic obstructive pulmonary disease after working in a South32, BHP Billiton PLC, and Seriti Power file class action for harm suffered

‘Spoor files class action lawsuit on behalf of coal miners against South32, BHP Billiton, Seriti Power’ 16 August 2023

Spoor filed the class action in the High Court of South Africa, Gauteng Local Division, and he said this application for certification of a class action seeks recourse for current and former coal miners, as well as dependants of deceased workers who contracted the illness. The applicants seek to hold South32, BHP Billiton PLC, and Seriti Power responsible for actions from March 12, 1965, to the present. The proposed applicant classes include Current and former coal miners who contracted CMDLD in the form of pneumoconiosis (with or without COPD). “Current and former coal miners who contracted COPD after working in a South32, BHP Billiton PLC, and Seriti Power. Dependants of coal miners who have died due to the illness. The applicants argue that South32, BHP Billiton PLC, and Seriti Power breached the legal duties owed to the miners by failing to implement statutorily mandated procedures and protections. As a result, the miners developed incurable lung diseases,” Spoor said.

…If approved by the court, the litigation will cover coal mine workers and dependants from many regions and rural communities given that miners often travel from afar to gain employment. The case was initiated by the Southern African Catholic Bishops’ Conference,” Spoor said. According to Spoor, every breath could be a struggle in the life of a coal miner suffering from CMDLD. “In exchange for backbreaking work that has generated enormous wealth for more than a century, miners far too often walk away with incurable lung diseases that require life-long treatments they cannot afford. Many have tragically lost their lives,” he said.

…One of the applicants, Maiwana Jan Nkosi, 65, who worked in a mine between 1981 and 2016, was diagnosed with Coal Mine Dust Lung Disease in 2020. “I experience constant chest pain. At night I have to sleep in a particular position to try to relieve the chest pain. My coughing and wheezing sometimes wake me up at night. When I walk quickly it feels like my chest is blocked, and I must stop and rest for a while. When I walk up an incline, I experience chest pain and can only walk very slowly. I often run out of breath. “The impact this illness has had on myself and my family has led to my inability to work after leaving the mine. My breathing is laboured, and I am not able to do physical work. Maintaining a job in my condition would be near impossible,” Nkosi said.