Aurora is a famous name for communists because a shot from the battleship Aurora signalled a key event in the 1917 Russian October Revolution. It's also the name of a mine in Springs made infamous because of mismanagement by owners with high-level political connections.
The Pamodzi mines in Springs and Orkney were taken over by Aurora Empowerment Systems two years ago. Its directors include President Jacob Zuma's lawyer Michael Hulley, his nephew, Khulubuse Zuma, and Zondwa Mandela, a grandson of former president Nelson Mandela.
Worse employers can hardly be imagined. Despite promising no retrenchments, they systematically extracted all value from the mines while failing to pay more than 5000 employees. One of the workers, 52 year old Marius Ferreira, committed suicide by drinking ant poison. He was owed R170 000 in wages.
The same week that he killed himself, Khulubuse Zuma donated R1 million to the ANC. It's easy to call the grossly obese Khulubese a "fat cat". He owns 19 cars, including a R2.5-million gull-wing Mercedes-Benz SLS 63 AMG, and spends between R3000 and R15000 when he visits his favourite cigar lounge in Durban.
Zondwa Mandela also owns a fleet of luxury cars and recently got off lightly after driving 158km/h in a 60km/h zone. The National Union of Mineworkers has called Aurora's directors "professional liars". They have kept none of their promises, with more than 40 000 people thrown into poverty by the retrenchments. They even failed to pay over provident funds, UIF and medical aid they deducted from workers, which is a criminal offence.
An environmental disaster also looms as disruption of pumping by Aurora has caused acid mine spillage. If the pumps don't operate, toxic water could contaminate groundwater resources within three years and potentially cause sinkholes in Nigel and Springs.