Kenya looks back to reclaim golden future
A gold mine at Kakamega in western Kenya has been reopened after a discovery of new gold seams in 2017. With an estimated €1.4 billion ($1.7 billion) worth of gold up for grabs, many hands are getting stuck in.
A nugget of wealth
A woman holding raw gold at a mine in Kakamega. The mine, which used to be run by British mining company Rosterman from the 1930s to the 1950s, is active again after Acacia Mining discovered an estimated 1.31 million ounces of gold in the Liranda Corridor in Kakamega.
To the bank!
A man builds a bank to halt the flow of water at the mine, before he starts the arduous task of sifting it for gold. The Kenya Chamber of Mines has described the grade of 12.1 grams per ton as "very good" and comparable to gold from major mines in Africa and the world.
Breaking rocks all day
Edward Sukoine, a 25-year-old miner who has been working here for three years, is seen at a mine in Kakamega. Sukoine breaks rocks 20 to 25 meters underneath the earth. Kakamega was the scene of a gold rush in the early 1930s.
Where there's muck there's brass
A man gets dirty as he reprocesses the dust-formed rock pieces. They turn into mud when washed with water. He's at a mine in Kakamega, a town in western Kenya lying about 30 km (18 miles) north of the Equator.
Turning silver into gold
A person holds two pieces of raw gold at a mine. Raw gold is silver- colored before it is cooked on a coal fire until it acquires its yellowish color. Acacia says it plans to spend $12 million (€9.3 million) this year on exploration on the West Kenya project.
Golden days
Workers are seen at a mine in Kakamega. The local inhabitants are mostly from the Luhya tribe, whose economic activity is mainly farming and fishing. When European settlers first visited the area, they were offered a local staple food called Obusuma.