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DRC army to remove 2 000 illegal miners from Glencore site
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Illegal miners at a copper and cobalt mine run by Glencore in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) defied a deadline to vacate the site on Tuesday, a union official said, raising fears of a potentially violent standoff.
A landslide last Thursday at the Kamoto Copper Company (KCC) concession, majority-owned by a Glencore subsidiary and located in the southeastern part of the country, killed 43 people, prompting the government to vow to remove the miners.
The army’s inspector general, General John Numbi, told Reuters on Monday that an operation to clear the estimated 2,000 miners would begin on Tuesday.
Reached by telephone, Joseph Yav Katshung, chief of staff for the provincial governor, said police were closing illegal trading houses around the mine and would call on the army if necessary.
But Delphin Monga, provincial secretary of the UCDT union, which represents KCC employees, said illegal miners inside the concession continued to work undisturbed and some had even thrown rocks at company vehicles.
“The miners have come back in even larger numbers than usual,” he said.
A spokesman for Switzerland’s Glencore, which is London-listed, declined to comment.
Some clashes broke out on Monday between miners and police. At least two officers’ weapons were seized at one point and one miner and one police officer were injured, Monga said.
Last week, the army evicted thousands of miners from China Molybdenum’s nearby Tenke Fungurume mine.
Numbi said the soldiers did not fire a single shot. However, African Resources Watch, a watchdog group based in the city of Lubumbashi, said in a statement that the army fired live rounds to disperse miners. It cited residents of the village of Kisanfu as saying three people died from gunshot wounds.
Army officials could not be reached for comment on Tuesday.
Root causes
Union officials and global activist groups – including Amnesty International – argue that expulsion does little to address underlying factors, such as poverty and unemployment, that push people to brave dangerous conditions and engage in illegal mining.
“Without an alternative, the artisanals won’t leave and the army will move in. When soldiers are sent into the field, we all know what happens,” said Charles Kumbi, regional programme director with the IndustriALL union.
Last week’s accident, which briefly sent Glencore’s shares tumbling seven percent, underscored foreign investors’ exposure to illegal mining activity on their properties.
Tens of thousands of informal miners operate in and around large industrial mines in the DRC. Often equipped with little more than shovels, buckets and straw sacks, they burrow deep underground in search of ore. Accidents are common.
DRC produces more than half the world’s cobalt, a key component in batteries for electric cars and other uses, but is one of the world’s least developed countries, afflicted by corruption, conflict and misgovernment.
Reports about the dire conditions in which some cobalt and copper is mined, including cases of child labour, have piled pressure on producers and end users to prove supply chains are clean.
Companies fear that copper and cobalt will be dubbed “conflict” minerals – as have gold, tin, tantalum and tungsten, which have been used to finance wars in eastern DRC, said Gregory Mthembu-Salter, a former United Nations sanctions monitor in DRC.
“If a lot of people do get killed in this, it would be a big step towards that,” he said.
While last week’s army intervention did force miners away from where they were operating at the Tenke Fungurume mine, it was unclear if they had abandoned the site or only retreated to surrounding areas to wait out the operation. Local activists said the area offered to the miners to exploit – on another side of the main mine – has only low-grade ore and is unlikely to satisfy them.
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