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Former BCL miner flees child maintenance arrears

The closure of the mine has brought misery for many of them
 
The closure of the mine has brought misery for many of them

On Friday, the magistrate court heard that Kebawetse Sephunya, a former plant attendant at BCL, who is in maintenance arrears of over P8,000 has disappeared into thin air after the mine was put under provisional liquidation in October. Sephunya has not been paying child maintenance starting from September 29, 2013 to February 2016.

He was ordered by Principal Magistrate Dumisani Basupi to pay P450 per month as maintenance fees for his child. A warrant of arrest has since been issued after he failed to appear in court as scheduled. The prosecution told the court that its efforts to apprehend him had become very complicated and difficult to achieve since the closure of BCL. 'My worship the accused person used to work at BCL Mine in Selebi-Phikwe. After the mine was closed it has become difficult and almost impossible task to locate the accused person. If the mine was still operational it was going to be easy for us to effect his warrant of arrest. He has since relocated from Selebi-Phikwe and his whereabouts are unknown. We apply for another mention date to be set and his warrant of arrest to be further extended,' Sergeant Mbatshi Mafa said. Meanwhile the chairperson of Botswana Mine Workers Union (BMWU), Joseph Molambane has told a Manual Workers Unemployment Symposium that six former miners of BCL and its subsidiary Tati Nickel Mining Company (TNMC) have committed suicide because they had not received proper counselling after the mines were closed.

Molambane said the closure, which came at a time they were promised cash injection, has had adverse impact on the lives of the ex-miners, their families and indeed many businesses.

“We will be laying to rest the sixth person who committed suicide over the weekend. This situation is very bad. We need to meet with the President to present our issues to him,” he said.