‘Gayton and Kenny must be charged’ say angry Riverlea residents

Residents want the duo, as executives of Central Rand Gold, and other directors, to be charged for failing to adhere to the requirements of the National Environmental Management Act.

The mine belonging to ex-convicts turned-businessmen Gayton McKenzie and Kenny Kunene has allegedly left the community of Riverlea, west of Johannesburg, with broken promises and misery, The Citizen reports.

Residents want the duo, as executives of Central Rand Gold (CRG), and other directors, to be charged for failing to adhere to the requirements of the National Environmental Management Act.

This is for not ever producing credible information and for not making provision for mine closure and rehabilitation… in terms of the Minerals and Petroleum Resources Development Act (MPRDA).

Residents note that CRG closed last April without notifying its employees of their salaries for the previous three months, with the community alleging that CRG left a vast swathe of non-rehabilitated operations.

According to David van Wyk, lead researcher at the Benchmark Foundation, of particular concern was an open cast pit less than five metres from a proclaimed heritage site (George Harrison Park, the site of the first mining licence in Johannesburg granted in 1886); and a Primary School (TC Esterhuysen, established in 1917).

He said the opencast pit presented a constant danger to the primary school and its pupils (aged six to 12 years) and that residents have for the last five years tried to draw the attention of the department of mineral resources but all has been in vain.

McKenzie did not respond to the allegations, saying he was suing Van Wyk for defamation. Residents now want to have CRG and its directors charged for not having had a credible Social and Labour Plan in terms of the MPRDA.

The Riverlea Community Forum wants the department to be charged in terms of negligence and failure to carry out its mandate as a department in terms of proper regulation and oversight of the activities of CRG.

The residents assert that that the department of the environment and the department of education, provincially and nationally, should be charged with negligence in this matter.

Last week, the department acknowledged receipt of the questions for comment but was yet to reply.

Read original story on citizen.co.za

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