Advertisement

DR Congo army moves to secure Chinese mine

Tuesday June 18 2019
chudja

rMen work in a gold mine in Chudja, near Bunia, north eastern DR Congo. The army has sent a battalion of troops to secure a Chinese cobalt mine from artisanal miners. The mission could turn violent hurting the standing of the commodity under the conflict-free minerals convention. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP

By AFP

Democratic Republic of Congo's army has sent a battalion of troops to oust illegal miners from land worked by a majority-owned Chinese company, the military said Tuesday.

Tenke Fungurume Mining (TFM), one of the largest cobalt and copper producers in the DRC, says "more than 10,000" illegal artisanal miners are at work on its concessions in Lualaba province, in the far south of the country.

"Since yesterday (Monday), a battalion has been deployed on a dissuasive mission against artisanal miners to get them to leave TFM's mining concessions voluntarily," army spokesman Colonel Emmanuel Kabamba told AFP.

Should persuasion not work by the start of next month Mr Kabamba said force would be unleashed, signalling potential skirmishes.

"This mission will last until July 2. After that, the army will use force to dislodge the illegal miners," he warned. "The timescale for the operation will be one week."

A battalion in the DRC armed forces is between 600 and 800 men.

Advertisement

TFM says that illicit exploitation and sales have hit revenue from the concessions, which extend over 1,437 square kilometres (555 square miles) in all.

Southern Africa Resource Watch (SARW), an independent regional watchdog based in South Africa, said the deployment of military was "dangerous and potentially counter-productive."

"There is no war but acts of theft are perpetrated against the company by artisanal diggers who are supported, facilitated and encouraged by services of the state," SARW said.

"The deployment of troops, if not well managed, risks turning into uncontrolled violations of human rights, which could undermine the reputation of the company and the chain of supply of Congolese cobalt."

SARW argued that soldiers were not the solution to "a threat to investment and the national economy that requires intervention by all parties," from the president down to local officials.

It recommended "the suppression of all purchases of minerals in the neighbourhood of the mining companies" and "severe sanctions against anyone ... caught in possession of minerals from the perimeter of the mining companies".

China Molybdenum has a majority stake in TFM, which is named after two communities living in the mining region.

It has access to high-grade cobalt and copper reserves expected to last for decades.

The Chinese firm bought shares in TFM from US company Freeport-McMoRan for $2.6 billion (2.3 billion euros) in May 2016.

Advertisement