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SIERRA LEONE: Women prospectors
find steady income
September 20, 2006 – (IRIN) Isata Kamara
never imagined herself as a gold miner in Koidu, Sierra Leone’s
diamondiferous eastern province. Before the civil war erupted in
1991, the tall, elegant 60-year-old tended fields to support herself
and her family. “After the war it became too difficult to
farm; much of the land had been mined out by these diamond diggers.
I couldn’t get enough money from farming so my children taught
me how to pan for this gold,” Kamara said, shyly pointing
to a large pile of glistening gold flakes.
Women make up 90 percent of Sierra Leone’s
small-scale alluvial gold prospectors, sources familiar with the
mining sector say. Discrimination and lack of skills – less
than 25 percent of Sierra Leonean women over the age of 15 are literate
– prevent many women from entering the official workforce.
They have a better chance of earning money as informal traders or
as alluvial gold miners.
Spurred on by the need to provide for their families,
the women doggedly pan the tailings of the diamond gravel with their
kitchen calabashes and shovels. Whilst the men around them search
endlessly for the winning diamonds that may transform their lives,
the women miners always get money at the end of the day. “It’s
fine work,” says Kamara. “We pan for gold most days
– there’s a lot of gold. We never go to bed hungry but
people doing the diamond work often do as they don’t find
anything.”
Unaware of international gold prices
Unlike diamonds, however, there is no official
gold market in Sierra Leone. Ignorant of current high international
gold prices, the women sell their gold either to the local chief
or to Lebanese dealers. They have no say in the price. Under Sierra
Leonean customary law, women’s status is equal to that of
a minor.
But, if local geologists are correct, the women
miners have stumbled on a potentially huge untapped resource, which
could, if marketed and planned efficiently, provide them with a
reliable source of income and financial independence. “This
gold could be a great way to empower the women of Sierra Leone,”
said Sia Tongo, president of Kono’s 5050 Group, an organisation
working for womens’ rights in the country.
“At the moment the people buying their gold
are cheating them and they are being undersold,” she said.
“But if they could form cooperatives, and if the gold industry
is made more official, this could really increase their livelihoods
and in the long run provide more revenue for the chiefdoms and districts.”
Government must regulate gold
The government however, is reticent to regulate
gold. Despite gold being found in the north, east and south of the
country, officials cannot provide any gold production or export
figures. Mineral sector observers say a lack of infrastructure after
the 10-year civil war is just one factor hindering the regulation
of gold.
But they also point to high levels of corruption
and a lack of political will to stop widespread smuggling into neighbouring
Guinea and Liberia. “Gold is being smuggled into Guinea,”
said Alimany Wurie, director of Mines. “A lot of people don’t
appreciate that when they get gold it should come through official
channels – instead they prefer to take it out to sell and
buy goods but we are trying to tackle the problem.”
Mineral experts say a properly set up gold trading
operation with a public information campaign, as well as buying
and selling offices, would allow people to see how gold could benefit
themselves and the country. It would also mean the beginning of
financial independence for the many women of Sierra Leone. “There
is huge potential for women if gold is formalised,” said Tongo.
“Things would improve for the women, for their children and
for the communities as a whole.”
From : http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=55644&SelectRegion=West_Africa&SelectCountry=SIERRA_LEONE
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