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Zambia’s Stary Mwaba mines the toxic legacy of the Copperbelt’s ‘black mountains’

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  • Post last modified:July 26, 2025

Zambia’s notorious “black mountains” – huge heaps of mining waste that scar the Copperbelt skyline – are deeply personal to Stary Mwaba, one of the country’s leading visual artists. As kids, Mwaba and his friends used to call it ‘mu danger’ – meaning ‘in the danger’. The ‘black mountain’ was this place where you shouldn’t go, but they would sneak in anyway to pick the wild fruits that somehow managed to grow there.

Nowadays, the young men heading to “mu danger” are looking for fragments of copper ore in the stony slag of these towering dumpsites – the toxic legacy of a century of industrial mining production in Zambia, one of the world’s biggest copper and cobalt producers. They dig deep and meandering tunnels – and hew out rocks to sell to mostly Chinese buyers, who then extract copper. It is tough, dangerous, often illegal and sometimes fatal work.

Mwaba’s latest work – on show at the Lusaka National Museum this month – tells the story of the young people who mine the black mountain in the town of Kitwe – and captures the rhythms of life among the residents of the Wusakile neighbourhood. They work for gang masters known as “jerabos”, a corruption of “jail boys” – hinting at their perceived criminality.

The artist has painted a series of large portraits, using old newspapers as a canvas. He cuts out articles that grab his attention – what he refers to as “grand narratives” – and sticks them on to a backing paper. He uses a soldering gun to burn away some of the words and create a series of perforations in the stories. Then he pours in paint to create the portraits, or what he calls the “little narratives”.

Mwaba hears stories of hardship and survival during the drawing, photography and performance workshops that he and other artists have held over several years. His paintings include “Jerabo”, which shows a miner preparing safety ropes that are tied around his waist as he lowers himself down narrow precarious tunnels, and “Shofolo”, which portrays a young man almost hugging his precious “shofolo” – the Zambian English, or Zamglish, word for shovel.

The portraits can be seen from both sides and, in characteristic Mwaba style, are brightly colored. The artworks are coated with a transparent acrylic and the borders of newspaper held together with clear tape because they are very fragile – like the existence of the people Mwaba has painted. They live in the shadow of the black mountain – the site since the early 1930s of millions of tonnes of waste, full of toxic heavy metals – which wreaks havoc on people’s health and the environment.

Mwaba comes from a family of miners – his great-grandfathers and one grandfather worked down the mines and his father above the ground. But the 49-year-old’s interest in the impact of Zambia’s mining as a subject for his paintings began almost accidentally in about 2011 – after he helped his daughter, Zoe, with a science project at the Chinese International School, which she attended in the capital, Lusaka.

The task was to demonstrate how plants absorb minerals and water. He and Zoe went to the market and bought a Chinese cabbage. It is not indigenous but is now eaten in many Zambian homes. The use of Chinese cabbage made the audience “uneasy and so uncomfortable”. At the time, the late Michael Sata was campaigning for the presidency – and tensions were high because of his vitriolic rhetoric against the Chinese, who are accused locally of dominating the Zambian economy and exploiting workers.

So Mwaba turned the science project into a work of art – in which he explored the Chinese presence in Zambia’s mining sector through three Chinese cabbage leaves, one dyed yellow to depict copper, one blue for cobalt and the third red for manganese. His Chinese Cabbage brought Mwaba much international acclaim, and he returned to Zambia in 2015, glowing with the success of an art residency and exhibition in Germany.

He went to Kitwe, where he had spent some childhood years. But his focus changed from just exploring the Chinese presence in Zambia to trying to tell the story of the black mountain people. “I went back to a place where I grew up and things had changed so much,” the artist says, adding that he “never, ever imagined that I would see the kind of the situation I see now – the poverty”. “It was a very emotional space and I was sad,” Mwaba says.

Mwaba had moved to Kasama in Northern Province in 1994, after his father suddenly died. Three years later Zambia’s mines were privatized – leading to massive job losses and an unprecedented economic crisis in the Copperbelt. The black mountain – always a source of environmental and health problems – now became somewhere to earn money. “The worst thing that happened is when the black mountain was super-profitable, most of these young people quit school.”

Unable to get a job anywhere else, Mwaba’s cousin Ngolofwana joined a crew of jerabos. Every day he wakes up and risks his life just to stay afloat and feed his family. But even when the government has banned mining there, the dumpsite’s wealth is tightly controlled by an aggressive hierarchy – with the top, sometimes very wealthy, jerabos often living up to their nickname. Frustrations further down the jerabo chain – of feeling exploited, giving up on education to fund someone else’s lavish lifestyle, and having little say in their own futures – are reflected in the painting of one young man in a turquoise T-shirt standing with his hands confidently on his hips.

“Boss for a Day” came out of a workshop in which Mwaba invited people to take their own photographs, striking a pose that reflected their hopes and dreams. And occasionally Mwaba’s art may change the course of someone’s life. Mwaba recalls a time where an older jerabo came to a workshop and said: “Hey, I really like what you’re doing. I think I may not understand it, but it’s best for my young brother to be coming here because I don’t want him to go through what I went through.”

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