By using this site, you agree to the Privacy Policy and Terms of Use.
Accept
BGTNBGTNBGTN
  • Home
  • BRICS
    • B – Brasil
    • R – Россия (Rossiya)
    • I – भारत (Bhārat)
    • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
    • S – South Africa
    • BRICS Plus
      • A – Argentina
      • E – مصر (Misr)
      • E – ኢትዮጵያ (Ityop’iya)
      • I – ایران (Irān)
      • S – السعودية (Al-Su’udiyya)
      • U – الإمارات العربية المتحدة
    • BRICS Partner States
      • A – الجزائر
      • B – Bolivia
      • B – Беларусь
      • C – Cuba
      • K – Қазақстан
      • I – Indonesia
      • M – Malaysia
      • N – Nigeria
      • T – ประเทศไทย
      • T – Türkiye
      • U – Uganda
      • U – Oʻzbekiston
      • V – Việt Nam
  • International
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Saudi Vision 2030
    • Business and Finance
    • Technology and Trends
    • Arts and Culture
    • Health and Lifestyle
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Travel and Exploration
    • BGTN Cares
  • Weather
Reading: Water war in North West province, South Africa
Share
Font ResizerAa
Font ResizerAa
BGTNBGTN
  • Brasil
  • Россия (Rossiya)
  • भारत (Bhārat)
  • 中国 (Zhōngguó)
  • South Africa
  • Argentina
  • مصر (Misr)
  • ኢትዮጵያ (Ityop’iya)
  • ایران (Irān)
  • السعودية (Al-Su’udiyya)
  • الإمارات العربية المتحدة
  • الجزائر
  • Bolivia
  • Беларусь
  • Cuba
  • Қазақстан
  • Indonesia
  • Malaysia
  • Nigeria
  • ประเทศไทย
  • Türkiye
  • Uganda
  • Oʻzbekiston
  • Việt Nam
  • Home
  • BRICS
    • B – Brasil
    • R – Россия (Rossiya)
    • I – भारत (Bhārat)
    • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
    • S – South Africa
    • BRICS Plus
    • BRICS Partner States
  • International
  • Sports
  • Features
    • Saudi Vision 2030
    • Business and Finance
    • Technology and Trends
    • Arts and Culture
    • Health and Lifestyle
    • Food and Agriculture
    • Travel and Exploration
    • BGTN Cares
  • Weather
Follow US
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
© 2024 BRICS Global Television Network. Newshound Media. All Rights Reserved.
BGTN > Editorial and opinions > Water war in North West province, South Africa
Editorial and opinions

Water war in North West province, South Africa

David Van Wyk
Last updated: March 28, 2024 3:16 pm
By David Van Wyk
4 Min Read
Share
Photo: iStock
SHARE

Tharisa Mine operates just south of Marikana along the N4 Platinum highway. To commence its huge opencast operation, the mine had to move a rural farmworker community off the land. The mine constructed “silver city,” a township of tin shacks, not proper housing, but tin shacks. For any open cast mine to operate, a wellfield of boreholes is constructed to drop the water table so that the operations can be conducted in dry conditions in the pit.

Tharisa pumps the water thus extracted into an old Aquarius shaft and has punted this as a solution to South Africa’s water challenges. However, Aquarius is also pumping the water into water tanks that feed the relocated community with tap water. This is cheaper than providing the community with properly treated water from Magalies Water which supplies the Bojanala District with water.

The community has been complaining for years about the inferior quality of the water. They have also been complaining that the mine expanded right up to the doorstep of the relocated community and that rocks from blasting falls on the houses and property. Just two weeks ago the company introduced a slap suite on activists in the community fighting for their constitutional rights to water and to a healthy and safe environment. The first sitting of this case happened on Tuesday, 12 March 2024 at the Mmabatho High Court in Mahikeng. The charge against the activists is that they are “hampering the business of the mine.”

ALSO READ: Water Catastrophe in Platinum Capital, Northwest South Africa

How valid are the claims of the community that their untreated water is unsafe? A municipal official from Rustenburg came to the community and took samples from two sites and evaluated the samples in a laboratory. Bench Marks then took the readings and compared them to global health standards for clean water using indicators from the World Health Organisation and the Environmental Protection Agency in the USA.

Bench Marks Foundation compared the Maditlhokwa water sample test outcome with World Health Organization and Environmental Protection Agency standards and that the water supplied to the people in Maditlhokwa is not in line with international standards and certainly is also in contravention of South African water laws, in particular the Water Services Act 108 of 1997 (Department of Water Affairs and Forestry, 1996. South African Water Quality Guidelines (second edition). Volume 1: Domestic Use). As such the mine is in contravention of the law and should be criminally charged.

The levels of Cadmium, Aluminium, Lead, Manganese, copper, Magnesium, Iron and Nitrate levels in the water are dangerously high. At the total dissolved solids level of 2490 exceeds acceptable levels for safe drinking water by five times. These exceedances can lead to a number of illnesses in the community including cancer, mental retardation, Alzheimer’s and Parkinsons disease, diabetes, heart disease and blue death in infants.

Following the testing of water at two points in the community the local municipality has long ordered the mine to stop the flow of untreated water to the community. An instruction was issued to Tharisa but to no avail. On the 29th of February 2024, a meeting to resolve the issue was held amongst the mine personnel, councillor and community members and it was agreed that Tharisa should stop supplying water that is not properly treated to the community. The mine has ‘promised ‘to attend to the issue.

ALSO READ: Billions of people still have no access to safe water as World Water Day is observed

 

 

South Africa and Afghanistan gear up for high-stakes at the T20 World Cup showdown
South Africa survived scare to beat USA
Today’s BRICS+ Numbers
The EU pork industry under pressure as tensions with main importer China increase
Today’s Brics+ Numbers
TAGGED:CrisisMarikanaSOUTH AFRICAWater CatastropheWater War
Share This Article
Facebook Flipboard Pinterest Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit VKontakte Telegram Threads Email Copy Link Print
What do you think?
Love0
Sad0
Happy0
Surprise0
Shy0
Joy0
Cry0
Embarrass0
Sleepy0
Angry0
Dead0
Wink0
Previous Article “Bacalhau à Brás: A Delicious Tradition for Easter Celebrations”
Next Article Saudi Arabia assumes leadership role in UN Women’s Rights Forum
1 Comment
  • NVByLMqPJOmXSvg says:
    April 7, 2024 at 10:59 pm

    AUJMtLOyphq

    Reply

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Stay Connected

FacebookLike
XFollow
PinterestPin
InstagramFollow
YoutubeSubscribe
TiktokFollow
LinkedInFollow
TumblrFollow
ThreadsFollow
BlueskyFollow
RSS FeedFollow
- Advertisement -
Ad imageAd image

Latest News

China and Africa Launch Year of People-to-People Exchanges at AU Headquarters
Arts and Culture Features
A New Leader in the Electric Vehicle Race
Business and Finance Features
China’s Official Manufacturing PMI Contracts in January, Diverging from Private Survey Amid Mixed Economic Signals
Business and Finance Features
India’s Economic Momentum Endures, Strong Growth Forecasts, Benign Inflation Anchor Policy in Early 2026
Business and Finance Features

You Might Also Like

Arts and Culture

WATCH: Ordinary people, extraordinary lives, the Chejon Fernandez story

July 16, 2025
Verulum water crisis
International

WATCH: South African police clash with irate Durban community as ongoing water crisis worsens

January 30, 2024
BGTN GIVES BACK
BLOG

BGTN gives back: Munsieville Pango community drive

January 22, 2024
Sports

South African Sprint Relay Team Shines with Silver at Paris 2024 Olympics

August 10, 2024

Google Translate

Learn About BRICS

  • B – Brasil
  • R – Россия (Rossiya)
  • I – भारत (Bhārat)
  • C – 中国 (Zhōngguó)
  • S – South Africa
  • Saudi Vision 2030

Our World

  • Support Centre
  • Careers
BGTNBGTN
Follow US
© 2025 BRICS Global Television Network (Pty) Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Username or Email Address
Password

Lost your password?