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Congo (Kinshasa): Militarization of Mining Well-Entrenched
AfricaFocus Bulletin
Dec 22, 2009 (091222)
(Reposted from sources cited below)
Editor's Note
"The illicit exploitation of natural resources is not a new
phenomenon in eastern DRC. It has characterised the conflict since
it first erupted in 1996 and has been well documented by
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), the United Nations Panel of
Experts and Group of Experts, journalists and others. Twelve years
on, the patterns remain the same, and despite abundant evidence of
these activities, no effective action has been taken to stop this
murderous trade." - Global Witness
Thus Global Witness in its latest report reiterates similar
conclusions by the UN's Group of Experts and other commentators, as
well as outlining proposed measures to address these issues.
This AfricaFocus Bulletin contains an executive summary of this
Global Witness report released in early December. While the report
concentrates on the role of the Hutu rebel group Forces
d‚mocratiques pour la liberation du Rwanda (FDLR), and the
Congolese national army, another report from Global Witness,
available at http://www.globalwitness.org (direct link:
http://tinyurl.com/yedzvhc), documents the history of involvement
of multiple other parties, including the governments of Uganda,
Rwanda, Burundi, and Zimbabwe, and groups supported by them.
Another AfricaFocus Bulletin, sent out today by e-mail, contains
several UN press releases, related to the report from the UN Group
of Experts on sanctions, and to human rights abuses by all parties
in the most recent fighting in the eastern Congo. See
http://www.africafocus.org/docs09/un0912.php
Note that Global Witness and other groups propose measures to
monitor and block minerals sales going to armed groups, Global
Witness does not endorse general sanctions against exports of
minerals, that would also harm small-scale miners. See the critique
of a more simplistic approach to such matters as instanced by a
recent 60 Minutes program: Three Problems with the 60 Minutes
Story on "Congo Gold," at http://africanarguments.org (direct
link: http://tinyurl.com/y8pksuq)
The Conflict Minerals Act introduced in the U.S. Congress does not
call for a boycott of minerals from Congo, but rather a more
targeted approach including monitoring and identification of
suspect trade networks. See
http://www.govtrack.us/congress/bill.xpd?bill=s111-891 and
http://www.house.gov/mcdermott/pr091119.shtml
For documentation on the mineral's supply chain, see the Enough
Project's From Mine to Mobile Phone
http://www.enoughproject.org/publications/mine-mobile-phone
For earlier AfricaFocus Bulletin's on the Democratic Republic of
the Congo, visit http://www.africafocus.org/country/congokin.php
++++++++++++++++++++++end editor's note+++++++++++++++++++++++
"Faced with a gun, what can you do?" - War and the militarization
of mining in the Eastern Congo
Global Witness http://www.globalwitness.org
December 7, 2009
Summary
"We are their meat, their animals. We have nothing to say." - Miner
from Shabunda (South Kivu), 28 July 2008
Note: The term "warring parties" is used throughout this report to
denote the range of armed groups operating in eastern DRC, as well
as the Congolese army
The militarisation of mining in eastern Democratic Republic of
Congo (DRC) is prolonging the armed conflict which has been tearing
the country apart for more than 12 years. In many parts of the
provinces of North and South Kivu, armed groups and the Congolese
national army control the trade in cassiterite (tin ore), gold,
columbite-tantalite (coltan), wolframite (a source of tungsten) and
other minerals. The unregulated nature of the mining sector in
eastern DRC, combined with the breakdown of law and order and the
devastation caused by the war, has meant that these groups have had
unrestricted access to these minerals and have been able to
establish lucrative trading networks. The profits they make through
this plunder enable some of the most violent armed groups to
survive.
In their broader struggle to seize economic, political and military
power, all the main warring parties have carried out the most
horrific human rights abuses, including widespread killings of
unarmed civilians, rape, torture and looting, recruitment of child
soldiers to fight in their ranks, and forced displacement of
hundreds of thousands of people. The lure of eastern Congo's
mineral riches is one of the factors spurring them on. By the time
these minerals reach their ultimate destinations - the
international markets in Europe, Asia, North America and elsewhere
- their origin, and the suffering caused by this trade, has long
been forgotten.
The illicit exploitation of natural resources is not a new
phenomenon in eastern DRC. It has characterised the conflict since
it first erupted in 1996 and has been well documented by
non-governmental organisations (NGOs), the United Nations Panel of
Experts and Group of Experts, journalists and others. Twelve years
on, the patterns remain the same, and despite abundant evidence of
these activities, no effective action has been taken to stop this
murderous trade. On the contrary, the warring parties have
consolidated their economic bases and have become ever more
entrenched.
Overview of findings
This report documents the militarisation of mining in the
conflict-affected areas of eastern DRC. Its findings and
conclusions, summarised below, are based primarily on Global
Witness field research in North and South Kivu in 2008, and in
Rwanda and Burundi in 2009.
- All the main warring parties are heavily involved in the mineral
trade in North and South Kivu. This practice is not limited to
rebel groups. Soldiers from the Congolese national army, and their
commanders, are also deeply involved in mining in both provinces.
- In the course of plundering these minerals, rebel groups and the
Congolese army have used forced labour (often in extremely harsh
and dangerous conditions), carried out systematic extortion and
imposed illegal "taxes" on the civilian population. They have also
used violence and intimidation against civilians who attempt to
resist working for them or handing over the minerals they produce.
- The most detailed information obtained by Global Witness relates
to the Forces d‚mocratiques pour la liberation du Rwanda (FDLR),
the predominantly Rwandan Hutu armed group, some of whose leaders
are alleged to have participated in the 1994 genocide in Rwanda,
and the Forces arm‚es de la R‚publique d‚mocratique du Congo
(FARDC), the Congolese national army. The involvement of these two
groups in the mineral trade is extensive and well-organised.
FDLR
- The FDLR has a stranglehold on the mineral trade in large parts
of South Kivu. In some areas, their economic activities have become
so successful that they appear to have become an end in themselves.
Local residents describe them as the "big businessmen".
- The FDLR sometimes trade openly, selling minerals in markets and
towns; on other occasions, they use Congolese civilians as
intermediaries.
- The FDLR systematically extort minerals and money from miners,
charging a flat fee of 30% on mining proceeds in some areas and
"taxing" minerals at roadblocks.
FARDC
- The most blatant example of FARDC involvement in mining is Bisie,
the largest cassiterite mine in the region, which accounts for
around 80% of cassiterite exports from North Kivu. From 2006 to
March 2009, Bisie mine was entirely under the control of an army
brigade. In 2007 and the first part of 2008, the FARDC based at
Bisie were collecting at least US $120,000 a month by taking a
commission of US $0.15 on every kilogramme of cassiterite.
- In some mines, a system has been set up in which particular days
of the week are allocated for civilian miners to work for
individual soldiers or their commanders. Soldiers also demand 10%
of minerals, as well as cash, at numerous military checkpoints
along the roads.
- Senior officers in the provincial command of the 8th and 10th
military regions of the FARDC have been profiting from this trade.
- Individual commanders or military units "own" particular
mineshafts. In Mukungwe, in South Kivu, a mineshaft has been
nicknamed "10th military region".
FARDC/FDLR collaboration
- The FARDC and the FDLR supposedly battlefield enemies often
act in collaboration, carving up territory and mining areas through
mutual agreement and sometimes sharing the spoils. The FDLR use
roads controlled by the FARDC, and vice versa, without difficulty.
Minerals produced by the FDLR are sent out through local airports
controlled by the FARDC in South Kivu.
Other armed groups
- The Congrès national pour la défense du peuple (CNDP), and
various other armed groups such as the mai-mai, have also profited
from the mineral trade, particularly through their own systems of
"taxation".
Smuggling
- Provincial government officials struggle to control mineral
exports across the DRC's eastern borders. Official declarations and
state revenues from exports of cassiterite and coltan have
increased since 2007, but almost all the gold in North and South
Kivu is still smuggled out. A Congolese government official told
Global Witness that at least 90% of gold exports were undeclared.
Rwanda and Burundi as transit countries
- The majority of the minerals produced in North and South Kivu
leave the DRC through Rwanda or Burundi. The governments of these
countries have effectively provided the warring parties in eastern
DRC with access to export routes and international markets. They
have failed to acknowledge the fact that these minerals are
fuelling the conflict in eastern DRC and have not held to account
companies in their country which engage in this trade.
The comptoirs
- Several of the main comptoirs trading houses based in Goma and
Bukavu buy, sell and export minerals produced by or benefiting
the warring parties. They include Groupe Olive, Muyeye, MDM, Panju
and others.
- The fact that these comptoirs are officially licensed and
registered with the Congolese government acts as a cover for
laundering minerals which are fuelling the conflict.
Foreign companies
- These comptoirs' customers include European and Asian companies,
such as the Thailand Smelting and Refining Corporation (THA
ISARCO), the world's fifth-largest tin-producing company, owned by
British metals giant Amalgamated Metal Corporation (AMC); British
company Afrimex; and several Belgian companies such as Trademet and
Traxys. These companies sell the minerals on to a range of
processing and manufacturing companies, including firms in the
electronics industry.
- Economic actors are turning a blind eye to the impact of their
trade. They continue to plead ignorance as to the origin of their
supplies and hide behind a multitude of other excuses for failing
to implement practices which would exclude from their supply chain
minerals which are fuelling the armed conflict.
- Foreign companies use the "legal" status of their suppliers as
justification for continuing to trade with them, without verifying
the exact origin of the minerals or the identity of intermediaries.
In reality, some of these "legal" suppliers are among the main
facilitators of the illicit trade with armed groups and army units.
- Some companies have claimed that the well-being of the Congolese
population in mining areas is dependent on these companies'
continued involvement in the trade. Such arguments ignore the
serious human rights abuses perpetrated against artisanal miners
and other civilians by the warring parties who exploit these
minerals and with whom these companies are prepared to continue
trading.
- Correspondence between some of these companies and Global Witness
has revealed that despite paying lip-service to "ethical"
principles, trading companies have no effective monitoring system
in place to check their supply chain or assess the human rights
impact of their trade.
- Correspondence from some of the major electronics companies has
shown a greater recognition of the need for due diligence but also
a lack of a sense of urgency and limited commitment to applying
checks throughout the entire supply chain.
Foreign governments
- International dialogue and peace talks have not tackled the
economic dimension of the conflict. Global Witness believes that
political agreements which do not address the exploitation of
natural resources as one of the main drivers of the conflict are
unlikely to lead to lasting peace.
- Home governments have failed to show moral leadership in holding
to account companies based in their countries that engage in trade
which benefits the warring parties and leads to human rights
abuses. They have fallen back on voluntary codes of conduct and
other non-binding guidelines, resisting calls for stronger action
to control the corporate sector.
- Most donor governments have chosen to concentrate on technical
solutions instead of addressing the fundamental causes of the
conflict. Not only has this allowed the warring parties, and the
companies which do business with them, to continue benefiting from
the mineral trade with impunity, but it has further delayed the
implementation of measures which would deprive the warring parties
of one of their principal sources of finance.
- The inadequacy of the international response to the economic
dimension of the conflict is obstructing development efforts. The
conflict in eastern DRC continues to cause deaths, displacement,
trauma and destruction of livelihoods on a massive scale all of
which impede development. Donor governments continue to pour vast
sums of money into the DRC, but this assistance is undermined by
their failure to address one of the fundamental aspects of the
conflict: the warring parties' access to natural resources.
The findings presented in this
report are based on Global Witness interviews with a wide range of
eyewitnesses and other sources in North and South Kivu in July and
August 2008, including miners, individual traders and trading
companies, mining companies, government and military officials,
members of armed groups, journalists, members of Congolese NGOs, UN
staff and foreign diplomats. Global Witness has protected the
identity of many interviewees in this report for their own
security. Global Witness carried out further research in Rwanda and
Burundi in March 2009. Additional information was obtained through
correspondence with companies and other sources in late 2008 and
early 2009.
Action to break the links between the mineral trade and armed
conflict
This report sets out detailed recommendations for governments,
individuals, organisations and companies inside and outside the DRC
who have the power the break the links between the mineral trade
and the conflict. Foremost among these recommendations are:
- measures to cut off warring parties' access to mining sites in
the DRC, as well as international trade routes and external
networks;
- ending the impunity protecting those engaged in illicit mineral
exploitation and trade, through actions by the governments of DRC,
neighbouring countries and countries where companies are
registered;
- thorough due diligence by all companies trading in minerals which
may originate from eastern DRC and stronger corresponding action by
their governments to hold accountable those who continue to trade
in ways which fuel the conflict.
Recommendations
To the Congolese government
- Set up a tighter control system over the chain of supply of
minerals, from the point of extraction to the point of export.
Establish a legal requirement that individuals or companies
handling minerals, at every stage of the supply chain, produce
written, verifiable documentation of the exact location from which
the minerals originate and the identity of their suppliers and any
intermediaries or third parties. Prohibit any mineral exports which
do not carry such documentation.
- Exercise greater oversight and control over the activities of
comptoirs. Revoke the licences of comptoirs and n‚gociants (buyers)
who persist in trading in minerals produced by or benefiting the
warring parties (including those named by the UN Group of Experts)
or who fail to produce precise, verifiable documentation on their
chain of supply, as outlined above. Investigate reports that some
comptoirs and n‚gociants are knowingly trading with armed groups or
the FARDC and, where substantial evidence exists, initiate
prosecutions.
- Carry out spot checks on the identity of suppliers to comptoirs
exporting minerals from North and South Kivu and investigate any
fresh allegations or suspicions that some comptoirs may be
obtaining supplies from individuals known to be close to armed
groups or FARDC units involved in mineral exploitation.
- Provide strong political and technical support to
provincial-level government agencies responsible for controlling
the mining sector, exports and border controls in North and South
Kivu. Senior nationallevel government officials should be prepared
to intervene promptly in cases where members of armed groups or the
FARDC prevent provincial officials from doing their job. Government
and judicial authorities should investigate reports of threats
against civilian officials by members of armed groups or the FARDC
and take action against those found responsible.
To Congolese government and military authorities
- Closely monitor the conduct of army brigades deployed in
mineral-rich areas; remove, discipline and, where appropriate,
investigate and initiate prosecutions against those found
responsible for the illicit exploitation of minerals and for human
rights violations committed in this context.
- Launch an investigation into reports that the 85th brigade, under
the command of Colonel Sammy Matumo, has been exploiting and
trading in cassiterite in Bisie from 2006 to March 2009. The
brigade's redeployment in March 2009 should not serve as a
substitute for legal action. If substantial evidence is found,
initiate judicial proceedings against Colonel Sammy Matumo and
other FARDC members found responsible for these offences and for
human rights violations committed in this context. Ensure that the
FARDC brigade replacing the 85th brigade is not based in Bisie and
does not engage in mineral exploitation and trade.
- Similarly, remove FARDC units known to be exploiting minerals in
other locations in North and South Kivu and take action against
their commanders and other FARDC members found responsible.
- Launch an independent investigation into allegations that senior
FARDC officials, at provincial and national level, may be profiting
from the trade in minerals in North and South Kivu; ensure that any
individuals found responsible for profiting from this trade or for
ordering or sanctioning such behaviour by others within the FARDC
are brought to justice, however senior their rank.
- Immediately suspend and, where appropriate, initiate prosecutions
against FARDC members who have collaborated with the FDLR and other
armed groups responsible for grave human rights abuses, including
through sharing the proceeds of the mineral trade.
To governments of neighbouring countries and transit countries
- Fully implement UN Security Council Resolution 1856 (2008) which
requires "all States, especially those in the region, to take
appropriate steps to end the illicit trade in natural resources,
including if necessary through judicial means" and report to the UN
Security Council on measures taken.
- In view of the gravity of the human rights situation in eastern
DRC and the fact that the warring parties rely heavily on funds
from the mineral trade, carry out additional due diligence with a
view to stopping imports of minerals which are produced by or
benefit any of the warring parties. Tighten controls of mineral
imports and insist that any minerals imported from the DRC are
accompanied by verifiable documentation indicating their precise
origin and the identity of intermediaries.
- Launch investigations and, if appropriate, prosecutions against
individuals or companies in their country who are trading in
minerals produced by or benefiting any of the warring parties in
eastern DRC. Suspend the trading licences of any such individuals
or companies, pending the outcome of investigations.
- Submit to the UN Sanctions Committee the names of individuals or
companies based in their country whose trade in minerals is helping
fund armed groups in eastern DRC.
To foreign governments, including diplomats and mediators involved
in peace talks
- Ensure that foreign policy on the DRC and the Great Lakes region
addresses the economic drivers of the conflict as one of the
central factors behind the continuing violence in eastern DRC.
- Ensure that the question of the economic agendas of the warring
parties is discussed explicitly and frankly in peace talks and
other regional and international political dialogue. Make clear
that the exploitation and trade of natural resources by armed
groups and army units is not acceptable under any circumstance.
Seek agreement among leaders of armed groups, as well as FARDC and
government officials, on measures to halt this illicit trade and
secure their commitment to implementing this agreement within their
ranks. Under no circumstances should negotiations include a
division or apportioning of natural resources between the warring
parties.
- Raise with the Congolese government, at the highest levels, the
question of the involvement of FARDC units and military commanders
in the mineral trade, and press for those responsible to be brought
to justice.
- Urge the Congolese government to implement the other measures
listed above; provide assistance and support to enable the rapid
implementation of these measures, in particular to strengthen the
capacity and effectiveness of provincial and local government
bodies responsible for overseeing the mining sector and controlling
exports.
- Ensure that clear guidelines and instructions prohibiting the
illicit exploitation of natural resources are included in security
sector reform and training programmes for the Congolese security
forces.
- Provide political and technical support to MONUC (the UN
peacekeeping mission in the DRC), as well as assistance in the form
of personnel, to enable it to fulfil its brief to "curtail the
provision of support to illegal armed groups derived from illicit
trade in natural resources", as provided for in UN Security Council
Resolution 1856 (2008).
To MONUC
- Ensure that the task of curtailing the provision of support to
armed groups through the trade in natural resources, included in
MONUC's mandate since December 2008, is fully integrated into the
work of UN military and civilian teams deployed in mineral-rich
areas of North and South Kivu; that these teams report regularly on
their findings; and that these findings are communicated promptly
to the UN Security Council. These efforts should cover the
exploitation of natural resources by all the principal armed
groups.
- In recognition of the fact that MONUC forces are severely
overstretched, adopt a targeted approach to the strategy to combat
illicit natural resource exploitation which can be implemented in
the short term. Concentrate monitoring efforts on the principal
mining sites known to be supplying armed groups and the trade
routes known to be used by these groups, with a view to halting
this trade. Set up monitoring and control points at strategic
locations such as important mines, key border posts, airstrips and
lake crossings used by armed groups. Carry out this work in close
collaboration with Congolese provincial government authorities.
To the UN Security Council
- Request regular reports on MONUC's progress in using "its
monitoring and inspection capacities to curtail the provision of
support to illegal armed groups derived from illicit trade in
natural resources", as mandated by UN Security Council Resolution
1856 (2008); propose further actions by MONUC and/or UN member
states, as appropriate, in response to MONUC's reports and
findings.
- Request regular reports from all member states on the
implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1857 (2008),
relating, in particular, to sanctions against individuals or
entities in breach of the arms embargo, including against those who
support armed groups through the trade in natural resources.
- Continue to support the work of the Group of Experts and ensure
that member states act on its findings.
To companies and traders purchasing, handling or trading in
minerals originating from eastern DRC or neighbouring countries
- Exercise stringent due diligence regarding their mineral
supplies: find out exactly where the minerals were produced (not
only the broad geographical area, but the precise location and
mine), by whom they were produced and under what conditions
(including use of forced labour, child labour, health and safety
and other labour conditions).
- Refuse to buy minerals if the above information is not available
or if there are indications that the minerals have passed through
the hands of any of the warring parties, benefited them in other
ways, or otherwise involved human rights abuses.
- Be able to demonstrate, with credible written evidence, the exact
origin of their mineral supplies, the routes they have taken and
the identity of those involved in the chain of custody, including
intermediaries or third parties who have handled them.
- Do not accept oral or vague assurances from suppliers as to the
origin of minerals and the identity of their own suppliers. Carry
out spot checks to verify the sources and the accuracy of
suppliers' assurances. Require these measures in all circumstances,
including in cases where minerals originate from areas which may be
remote or difficult to access. Commission and publish regular
independent third-party audits of their supply chain.
- Federations and associations of comptoirs and other trade bodies:
adopt an explicit policy not to buy or handle minerals which
benefit any of the warring parties in eastern DRC. Require their
members to carry out above due diligence steps systematically and
to demonstrate precisely where all their supplies come from. Set up
mechanisms for independently monitoring and checking whether their
members are complying with these requirements.
To governments of home states in which companies are registered
- Provide clear guidance to companies purchasing or trading in
minerals from eastern DRC or intending to do so in the future.
Publicly warn these companies that they should proceed with
caution, that the government is monitoring the implications of
their activities and that they could face a number of liability
risks if they are found to be assisting or facilitating human
rights abuses.iv
- Insist that companies carry out the highest level of due
diligence regarding their entire chain of supply, as outlined
above. Adopt national legislation that requires the performance of
due diligence extraterritorially (in this case, in the DRC and the
Great Lakes region), identifies specific measures which companies
are expected to take and standards they are expected to meet, and
specifies government action which would be triggered by a company's
failure to take these steps.
- Ensure that these steps are taken not only in relation to imports
from the DRC, but also from neighbouring countries such as Rwanda,
Burundi, Uganda and Tanzania, as minerals originating from the DRC
may be imported from these countries without being clearly
identified as Congolese.
- In parallel with initiatives to introduce legislation (as above),
effectively monitor companies' adherence to international standards
such as the OECD Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises.
Reprimand those companies found to be in violation of these
standards and formulate strong recommendations for remedying their
business practices.
- Where there are indications that companies may be trading in ways
which are benefiting any of the warring parties, carry out
immediate detailed investigations. If credible information confirms
this link, officially advise the companies to cease trading and
purchasing from that specific area or supplier until the companies
can demonstrate that their trade is not financing any of the
warring parties or contributing to human rights abuses. In cases
where complicity can be demonstrated, initiate prosecutions against
companies and individuals.
- Submit to the UN Sanctions Committee the names of individuals or
companies registered in their country whose trade in minerals is
helping fund armed groups in eastern DRC, in conformity with UN
Security Council Resolution 1857 (2008). These should include
companies named in the reports of the Group of Experts, such as
those registered in the UK and Belgium.
- Do not financially support or invest in companies whose trading
activities benefit groups or individuals responsible for serious
human rights abuses in eastern DRC, for example through export
credit agencies or state pension schemes.
To the International Criminal Court (ICC)
- Recognise the role of economic actors and companies in crimes
within the ICC's jurisdiction, as set out in the Rome Statute.
- Investigate individuals including those heading comptoirs and
foreign companies buying minerals from North and South Kivu who,
through their trading practices, are financing armed groups or army
units responsible for war crimes or crimes against humanity. Where
appropriate, and pursuant to the principle of complementarity with
national jurisdictions, initiate prosecutions of individuals
against whom there is evidence of involvement in such crimes. Under
the Rome Statute, the ICC has jurisdiction against an individual
who "for the purpose of facilitating the commission of such a
crime, aids, abets or otherwise assists in its commission or its
attempted commission, including providing the means for its
commission".1
- Encourage states to launch their own investigations and, where
appropriate, prosecutions of economic actors suspected of
involvement in crimes within the ICC's mandate. Facilitate the work
of national law enforcement agencies and monitor the progress of
these investigations and prosecutions in national jurisdictions.
Global Witness is calling for actions targeted specifically at
those parts of the mineral trade which are controlled by armed
groups or military units and has developed the above
recommendations with this goal in mind. A crackdown on this part of
the trade would not have significant negative effects on the
civilian population in the long term, as the profits currently
derived from it serve primarily to enrich the elite of businessmen,
the military and leaders of armed groups.
Global Witness does not take the position that mining activities in
eastern DRC should cease altogether. Nor does it advocate a boycott
or embargo of the trade as a whole, as such blanket measures would
adversely affect the sections of the mineral trade which are not
controlled by any of the warring parties.
The aim of Global Witness's campaign, therefore, is not to stop
artisanal miners from trading, nor to close down mines in eastern
DRC, but to exclude the warring parties, and their intermediaries,
from the supply chain and trading networks, so that miners are able
to sell only to legitimate, civilian buyers who do not have
connections with any of the warring parties. Global Witness also
aims to highlight, and ultimately stop, the grave human rights
abuses committed by the warring parties involved in the
exploitation and trade of minerals.
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