16 December 2015
Burma jade mine landslides: an annus horribilis
Posted by Dave Petley
Burma jade mine landslides
Yesterday there were reports of yet another landslide in the jade mine area of northern Burma (Myanmar). This time the landslide appears to have killed at least one person, with a further ten missing. If these individuals were buried then the likelihood that they survived is very low. Whilst reports are sketchy, it appears that this was another collapse of a waste pile onto informal miners who scavenge the dumps:
The Irrawaddy news service cited a police officer Tuesday as saying that one person had been confirmed dead since the collapse of a dump pile in La Mong Kone village of Hpakant township the day before. “The landslide moved slowly, so most of the people working on the waste pile had time to run for their lives,” he said. “According to witnesses, he fell down from a cliff and was buried deeply,” he added, warning of the threat of more landslides in the area. Khin Maung, a miner who witnessed the collapse, told The Irrawaddy that around 20 people had been mining for jade residue at the time of the incident. “The waste pile slowly slid down, with people shouting and running away. Some escaped, but some did not,” Khin Maung added.
The Hpakant area of Burma has suffered a string of major landslides this year, including the following prior to the most recent event:
Date | Location | Fatalities | Injuries |
06/01/2015 | Hpakant town | 2 | |
08/02/2015 | Hpakant town | 4 | |
06/03/2015 | Maw Mau Layang, Hpakant town | 24 | |
30/03/2015 | Hpakant town | 30 | 2 |
09/04/2015 | Lonekhin village, Hpakant town | 70 | |
20/11/2015 | Sankhatku village, Hpakant town | c.214 |
Over 300 fatalities in a year is a truly dreadful toll for a hazard that should be entirely avoidable. A key question is why Burma has suddenly started to suffer such huge losses. Has something changed, or could it be that only now is information about the level of loss becoming apparent. The answers lie in a fascinating article on the Human Rights Watch website:
The miners were working at a site used by dozens of Burmese and Chinese companies that have dramatically increased mining in the past year, driving many small-scale miners to scavenge for small jade deposits the machinery misses, in dangerous dump sites where landslides are common. Since large-scale mining resumed in 2014, profits have skyrocketed, but that has done little to reduce the threats to miners’ safety.
Unfortunately until safety at the mines in Burma is addressed, landslide losses will continue at this rate. It is tempting to blame the illegal miners scavenging the waste dumps, but the reality is that it in incumbent on the mining companies to make their operations safe.