Giant mine machine swallowing up Senegal’s fertile coast

Like something from the science fiction film “Dune”, the “world’s biggest mining dredger” has been swallowing acre after acre of the fertile coastal strip where most of Senegal’s vegetables are grown.

The jagged 23-kilometre-long (14-mile) scar the gigantic rig has left mining for zircon — which is used in ceramics and the building industry — is so big it is visible from space.

Amid a deafening din, the massive machine sucks up thousands of tonnes of mineral sands an hour, moving forward on an artificial lake created with water pumped from deep underground.

It is now tearing through the dunes of Lompoul — one of the smallest and most beautiful deserts in the world — a tourist hotspot by the endless beaches of Senegal’s Atlantic coast.

Thousands of farmers and their families have been displaced over the past decade to make way for the colossal floating factory run by the French mining group Eramet.

It denies any wrongdoing, insists its operations are exemplary and even plans to step up the pace of mining.

But locals accuse it of destroying this rich but delicate ecosystem on the western edge of Africa’s semi-arid Sahel region.

The project has brought “despair and disillusion”, said Gora Gaye, the mayor of Diokoul Diawrigne district which takes in Lompoul.

For years critics of the mine said villagers’ protests at losing the land were ignored, with complaints about “derisory” compensation smothered by the authorities.

This article has been posted by a News Hour Correspondent. For queries, please contact through info@newshour.media
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