/ 5 May 2003

Gold Fields to defend reparations lawsuit

Gold Fields, the second largest gold producer in South Africa, will vigorously defend a lawsuit brought against to it by the company’s former employees, company officials said on Monday.

Ed Fagan, an American lawyer, and his South African counterpart John Ngcebetsha were expected to file the lawsuit in New York on Monday on behalf of Gold Fields’ former workers.

Fagan and Ngcebetsha claim that Gold Fields exposed more than 500 of its former employees to ”dangerous working conditions leading to uranium contamination”, and they seek compensation for that, the Business Day newspaper reported on Monday.

Gold Fields representative Willie Jacobsz said the company received a letter from Fagan on April 22 informing them that he and Ngcebetsha intended suing the gold producer.

”I read that they may file; it could be today (Monday) that something could come up,” Jacobsz said, adding Gold Fields had not yet received letters confirming that Fagan had filed the lawsuit.

Business Day reported that Gold Fields was taking the lawsuit seriously, and would strenuously defend it. Fagan and Ngcebetsha demand compensation of up to $7-billion (about R52-billion).

Ngcebetsha and Fagan are claiming billions of rands from Sasol, De Beers and Anglo American on behalf of victims of apartheid. – Sapa