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Fifty nine people killed in Burkina Faso Gold Mine blast

59 people killed in Burkina Faso Gold Mine blast

According to the state television and witnesses, a powerful explosion near a gold mining facility in southwestern Burkina Faso took the lives of 59 people. It injured more than about 100 on Monday.

After the blast in the village of Gbomblora, regional officials released a provisional toll, according to RTB. Chemicals used to treat gold that was kept at the site are thought to have triggered the explosion. “I saw bodies all over the place.” Sansan Kambou, a forest ranger who was present at the time of the explosion, told The Associated Press over the phone that it was “terrible.”‘ Around 2 p.m., the first explosion occurred, followed by further blasts as people fled for their lives, he claimed.

Burkina Faso is Africa’s fastest-growing gold producer and the continent’s fifth-largest, with gold being the country’s most important export. In 2019, the industry employed over 1.5 million people and had a market value of around $2 billion. Small gold mines, such as Gbomblora, have exploded in popularity in recent years, with over 800 scattered across the country. As per the Institute for Security Studies in South Africa, much of the gold is trafficked into neighboring Togo, Benin, Niger, and Ghana.

Jihadists linked to al-Qaida and the Islamic State are said to have employed the small-scale mines in strikes in the nation since 2016.

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