Rescue and recovery operations were ongoing Sunday for two miners trapped following a partial collapse at an unregulated small-scale gold mining pit in central Guyana, local law enforcement confirmed. The incident unfolded at approximately 3:23 p.m. local time on Saturday, June 13, 2026, at the St. Elizabeth Backdam mining concession in Potaro, Region 8, according to official statements from the Guyana Police Force.
Preliminary investigative findings show that the two trapped miners were working alongside a group of other crew members in a 60-foot-deep excavation pit when sudden structural failures of the pit’s eastern and western walls triggered a collapse. All other crew members were able to evacuate the pit before the debris fully settled, but 32-year-old Franky Hussain and 38-year-old Neunes Neunes Da Silva became trapped beneath tons of fallen earth and rock. The collapse also buried a heavy excavator machine operating at the site. Hussain is a resident of Guyana’s North West District, Region 1, while Da Silva is a Brazilian national who works as an independent small-scale gold miner—commonly referred to locally as a pork-knocker—operating in the region.
As of Sunday afternoon, the immediate rescue and recovery work is being led by the mine’s owner and on-site mining crew, per the police statement. Law enforcement officers and technical representatives from the Guyana Geology and Mines Commission, the government body responsible for regulating the country’s large and small-scale mining sectors, have already been deployed to the site to conduct a full investigation into the cause of the collapse and coordinate with rescue teams. Updates on the operation’s progress are expected as efforts continue to reach the trapped miners.
