Feature: Climate change-inspired coal seam fires a threat to human life 

Source: Feature: Climate change-inspired coal seam fires a threat to human life – NewsDay Zimbabwe

BY NOKUTHABA DLAMINI

SIX-YEAR-OLD Lincoln Martin Tom constantly scratches his severely burnt feet. He is visibly in pain.

Lincoln, from Hwange’s Number 3, saw his life turn into a nightmare after he accidentally stepped on coal seam fires while walking home from church in Madumabisa village with his grandmother in September last year.

“It was around 5pm after church when they were coming home and Lincoln accidentally stepped on the fire,” his mother Gloria Tom narrated.

“There was no sign that there could be fire beneath that ground. His feet were severely burnt and he is yet to recover from the burns.

Tom said her son was hospitalised for two months at the Hwange Colliery Hospital as doctors battled to treat his burns.



Doctors had to graft skin from his thighs to repair the severe damage on his feet, but the wounds are yet to heal.

“I suspect that the burns went deep beyond his skin because the wounds are taking too long to heal,” she said.

The tragedy disrupted Lincoln’s early childhood development education as he is still struggling to walk despite being discharged from hospital on November 9 last year.



His parents are struggling to pay his hospital bills and to buy medication because their sources of income are limited.

“We did not get help from Hwange Colliery Company Limited (HCCL) or anyone and I had challenges in footing the hospital bills and buying medication,” she said.

“Whenever they could, my siblings used to assist with medication, but we have not been able to buy all the medication that he requires. It’s painful to see my child in this condition because at times he wakes up in the middle of the night to scratch his feet, he will be in so much pain that my husband and I have to watch helplessly.”

A number of children and even adults in Hwange can relate to young Lincoln’s harrowing tale because a growing number of people are falling victim to the underground fires at the HCCL-owned coal mining concessions.

The coal seam fires have forced government to hire a German firm, DDT, to establish the causes of the fires and find a solution to the hazard.

According to Global Forest Watch, coal seam fires occur underground when a layer of coal in the earth’s crust is ignited.

The fires are often hard to detect because they spread underground and are even harder to extinguish.

Scientists say the underground fires are burning hundreds of millions of tonnes of coal globally every year and are contributing to climate change and increasingly becoming a threat to human life as witnessed in Hwange.

Experts say the coal seam fires may be contributing more than 3% of the world’s annual carbon dioxide emissions, which cause global warming.

Research by Stacher, which was published in the International Journal of Coal Geology, also says the fires release noxious chemicals into the air which condense to contaminate the soil and water with substances such as mercury, selenium and sulphides.

In Hwange, the underground fires are taking a toll on road infrastructure, with one major road now closed after it caved in, and they are also causing serious health complications for locals that accidentally step on them.

Scores of women and children are now nursing life-altering injuries like those inflicted on Lincoln.

Four-year-old Sihlobosenkosi Junior Nyoni from Madumabisa village was also severely burnt in the hands as he drove away a stray herd of cattle.

His distraught mother, Chipo Nyoni said the accident, which happened on September 2 last year, could have been avoided if the HCCL dumpsite at B Section was cordoned off.

Sihlobosenkosi, who was in the company of other children from the neighbourhood, was burnt while picking a stone close to the dumpsite.

“When we took him home, I was advised by others to apply a raw scrambled egg on his body to treat the burns,” Nyoni said.

“We kept applying the egg and some creams for several days, but his hands remained swollen and the skin was peeling off.”

Nyoni, a vegetable vendor in the coal mining town, said she failed to take her son to hospital because she could not afford the bills.

She fears one of Sihlobosenkosi’s hands would be permanently disfigured by the burns.

In December last year, eight-year-old Alisha Sekina Muzviti from Makwika village in Hwange died a month after she was burnt by the seam coal fires while relieving herself in a nearby bush.

A November 2021 Centre for Natural Resource Governance (CNRG) report titled Effects of Coal Seam Fires and Other Environmental Hazards on Children in Hwange draws a link between the raging fires and climate change.

CNRG said the fires had left some Hwange residents with near-death experiences and permanent disabilities.

It said several children had fallen victim to the coal seam fires and suffered a range of physical and psychological effects, which include post-traumatic stress disorder.

“In most mining regions in Zimbabwe, environmental laws are poorly implemented, resulting in creation of death traps for children who often find joy in playing with abandoned equipment and chemicals or use open pits, sometimes with toxic substances, as swimming pools,” the report said.

“Children, by their very nature, love playing and having fun. They are curious, experimental and adventurous. They have limited knowledge of the life changing dangers that surround them in mining compounds.”

HCCL managing director Charles Zinyemba told journalists during a recent tour that most people who get burnt by the fires would have trespassed into protected areas.

Zinyemba dismissed as “untrue” residents’ claims that they are forced to enter some of the unprotected areas to access water or ablution facilities.

“We have done everything to ensure that those residents have water, although at a rationed rate,” he said.

Speaking during the same tour, Mines and Mining Development minister Winston Chitando, said government was addressing the problem of coal seam fires in Hwange.

Chitando said the German firm, DDT, which was hired by HCCL to find a solution to the menace, would conclude its work next month.

“Afterwards, the government will ensure that serious action is taken to address the problem once and for all,” he said.


Mines minister Winston Chitando

But CNRG said lack of investment in recreational facilities by mining companies was one of the reasons that had resulted in children playing in dangerous zones, hence a need for more practical solutions and recreational infrastructure.

“In most mining regions in Zimbabwe, environmental laws are poorly implemented, resulting in creation of death traps for children who often find joy in playing with abandoned. Equipment, and chemicals or use open pits, sometime with toxic substances, as swimming pools,” the CNRG report read.

“It is, therefore, important for mining companies to put in place policies that protect and safeguard children from physical danger and dangerous sites must be properly secured to ensure children do not gain access. In places with underground fires such as Hwange, the company and the Environmental Management Agency have a duty to keep watch over these fires and warn the community accordingly.”

CNRG also recommended that companies that dig and leave open pits “must be heavily fined and banned from operating” as they posed risks to unsuspecting children.

It challenged the Health and Child Care ministry to carry out inspections on the safety and wellbeing of children in mining zones and make policy recommendations to government for tightening of laws to ensure children do not fall victim to mining hazards.

“The Department of Social Development should consider providing psychosocial support to all the victims and their families, including support for treatment of post-traumatic stress disorder. The government and mining companies should capacitate local health centres to deal with victims of coal seam fire disasters. Government need to come up with rehabilitation programs for victims coal seam fire victims and also how to manage the coal seam fires.”

CNRG also added that government needed to align its progressive climate change response strategy and policy to practical reduction in coal activities in Hwange.

Yet, for victims like Lincoln, the action might be a case of too little too late as they have to live with permanent scars and life-altering experiences.

  • This story was produced under the WAN-IFRA Media Freedom African Media Grants initiative. The content produced reflects the author’s views and not those of WAN-IFRA Media Freedom, WAN-IFRA FR, or the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Denmark

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