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Mining firms to appeal silicosis ruling

"We can confirm that they will appeal the ruling," said Charles Abrahams, an attorney who acted on behalf of the miners.

The sun sets behind a shaft outside the mining town of Carletonville, west of Johannesburg, July 7 2015.

Gold mining firms will appeal against a South African court ruling allowing class action suits seeking damages for up to half a million miners who contracted the fatal lung diseases silicosis and tuberculosis, a lawyer for the miners said on Friday.

A High Court decision last month set the stage for protracted proceedings covering cases dating back decades in the largest class action suits yet in Africa's most industrialised country.

Silicosis is an incurable disease caused by inhaling silica dust from gold-bearing rocks. It causes shortness of breath, a persistent cough and chest pains, and also makes people highly susceptible to tuberculosis.

The court's upper estimate of potential claimants is significantly higher than previous estimates at 500,000 claimants.

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"Assuming a conservative claim of $6,500 per claimant, this approximates claims in the total amount of $3.25 billion," said Max Ebrahim, South African based insurance partner at law firm Clyde & Co.

Anglo American, Africa's top gold producer AngloGold Ashanti, Gold Fields, Harmony Gold, Sibanye Gold and African Rainbow Minerals, which were defendants in the judgment handed down May 13, have formed the Occupational Lung Disease (OLD) group to deal with such issues.

The group declined to comment and will respond later on Friday, OLD spokesperson Charmane Russell told Reuters.

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