Women in Mining, Africa (WiM-AFRICA) on Saturday, remembered the Silent 15 of Bilalikoto, an annual continental day of commemoration dedicated to women who have lost their lives in mining accidents across Africa, with special focus on artisanal and small-scale mining.
The observance honours the memory of more than 48 artisanal miners, most of them women, who were killed in a mine collapse in Bilalikoto, Mali, on February 15, 2025.
The victims were working to support their families when the tragedy occurred. Their deaths, WiM-AFRICA said, reflect a broader and recurring pattern of preventable mining disasters affecting women across the continent.
Similar incidents have been recorded in several African countries. In Obuasi, Ghana, dozens of artisanal miners died in mine collapses linked to unsafe underground workings.
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In the Democratic Republic of the Congo, repeated collapses at artisanal cobalt and copper sites in Katanga have claimed many lives, including women working informally.
In Zimbabwe, mine collapses in Gwanda and Mashonaland West resulted in multiple fatalities among informal miners. In Nigeria, incidents in Zamfara, Niger, and Benue states exposed major gaps in mine safety oversight.
In Kenya, recent gold mine collapses in Siaya County killed women miners, further underlining the regional scale of the crisis.
WiM-AFRICA described Silent 15 of Bilalikoto not only as a memorial but as a call for urgent and coordinated action to address systemic failures in mining safety, formalisation, and accountability.
The group noted that women in artisanal and small-scale mining often operate in hazardous conditions outside legal frameworks. Many lack training, protective equipment, emergency response systems, and social protection.
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The organisation stressed that these deaths are not isolated accidents but symptoms of deeper structural challenges. These include weak enforcement of safety regulations, limited investment in the formalisation of artisanal mining, absence of gender-responsive mining policies, and opaque mineral supply chains that disconnect buyers from conditions at mine sites.
WiM-AFRICA urged the African Union institutions, national and local governments, mining companies, mineral buyers, development partners, and civil society groups to prioritise safety as a central pillar of mining governance.
Key demands include formalising artisanal mining, enforcing safety standards, ensuring compensation for families of deceased miners in line with international practice, strengthening traceability and accountability, and integrating women into decision-making processes across the sector.
The group warned that as Africa positions itself as a major supplier of critical minerals for global development and the energy transition, the human cost of extraction must not be ignored. It stressed that the future of Africa’s mining sector must be built on safety, dignity, and justice for those who work within it.
Silent 15 of Bilalikoto, observed every February 15, stands as a continental reminder that remembrance must translate into reform, and that mining development must not come at the expense of women’s lives.



