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Home / Mining / GOVERNMENT RESORTS TO CONSULTATION OF LOCAL COMMUNITY TO FIGHT ILLEGAL MINING
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GOVERNMENT RESORTS TO CONSULTATION OF LOCAL COMMUNITY TO FIGHT ILLEGAL MINING

January 07, 2026 / Admin
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Chikoti:?Traditional leaders play a critical role

The Malawi Government has opted for engagement meetings with stakeholders across the country including small scale mining communities in order to address the proliferation of illegal mining.

Illegal mining, mainly by Artisanal and Small-scale miners targeting gold and gemstones, has become rife in the country with miners using unsustainable mining practices that is resulting in serious environmental degradation in several Artisanal and Small-scale Mining (ASM) hotspots.

The illegal ASM practices has mainly affected districts such as Kasungu, Lilongwe, Nkhotakota, Zomba, Chiradzulu, Balaka, Machinga, Phalombe, Nkhata Bay, Karonga.

The miners are mainly using unsafe mining practices, which have resulted in fatal accidents leading to deaths with the latest fatalities reported in Kasungu where a dozen of ASMs have perished.

In an effort to address the worrying situation, the Malawi Mining and Mineral Resources Regulatory Authority (MMRA) in collaboration with the Department of Mines organized sensitization and consultative meeting at Sun and Sand in Mangochi, which attracted participants from Balaka, Machinga, Mangochi, Zomba, and Phalombe.

The meeting which attracted District Council members and traditional leaders discussed strategies to curb illegal and unsafe mining and promote responsible mining practices in the Southern Region.

The Southern Region meeting came after the Ministry had conducted similar meetings in Northern and Central Regions.

Speaking during the meetings, Director of Administration in the Ministry of Natural Resources, Energy and Mining Andrew Chisamba highlighted that the engagement was prompted by a series of mining-related accidents that have occurred across the country, resulting in the loss of lives.

“What prompted these consultative meetings are accidents that have occurred so far in the country and the lives that have been lost in the process, all due to illegal and unsafe mining. As a department, we felt we could not just sit back but take action, starting with consultative meetings with key stakeholders at district level,” said Chisamba.

MMRA Director General Mphatso Chikoti emphasized that traditional leaders and district structures play a critical role in identifying illegal mining activities and promoting safe and lawful mining practices within their communities.

Paramount Chief Chiikulamayembe appealed to MMRA and the Department of Mines to maintain the engagement model, noting that involving chiefs and local leadership enhances community awareness, compliance, and collective responsibility in addressing illegal and unsafe mining.

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The establishment of a stable and self-sustaining ecosystem, but not necessarily the one that existed before mining began. In many cases, complete restoration may be impossible, but successful remediation, reclamation, and rehabilitation can result in the timely establishment of a functional ecosystem.



The cleanup of the contaminated area to safe levels by removing or isolating contaminants. At mine sites, remediation often consists of isolating contaminated material in pre-existing tailings storage facilities, capping tailings and waste rock stockpiles with clean topsoil, and collecting and treating any contaminated mine water if necessary.