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The Tenke Fungurume mine is one of the biggest in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Photo: Reuters

Congo sends in troops to guard Chinese-owned copper mine amid fears of human rights abuses

  • Military says soldiers are to ward off illegal miners but watchdog group says move is dangerous and could be counterproductive

Congo’s military has deployed hundreds of soldiers to protect a major copper and cobalt mine owned by China Molybdenum from illegal miners, an army spokesman said on Wednesday.

The Tenke Fungurume mine is one of the biggest in the Democratic Republic of Congo, which is Africa’s leading copper producer and the world’s top miner of cobalt, a key component in electric car batteries.

Mining companies operating in Congo, which include Glencore, Ivanhoe and Barrick, routinely say the presence of illegal miners on their properties is one of their greatest challenges. As many as 10,000 diggers have been estimated to operate in and around the Tenke mine.

The army deployed several hundred troops on Tuesday to the Tenke mine, said the spokesman, Colonel Emmanuel Kabamba.

China’s vast investment in Africa hits a snag in Congo

“The hierarchy decided to deploy soldiers to secure the company because the company contributes to the economy of this country,” Kabamba said. China Molybdenum did not respond to a request for comment.

An artisanal miner is seen at Tilwizembe a former industrial copper-cobalt mine in the south of the Democratic Republic of the Congo, in 2016. Photo: Reuters

The watchdog group Southern African Resources Watch (SARW) said in a statement that the deployment was “dangerous and potentially counterproductive”.

“The deployment of soldiers, if not well managed, risks leading to unfortunate human rights abuses, which could tarnish the reputation of the company and the supply chain for Congolese cobalt,” it said.

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Previous army deployments to Congolese mines have generated controversy. Government troops killed scores of civilians in 2004 in the copper-mining town of Kilwa as they battled a small group of ill-equipped rebels.

Nine Congolese soldiers were tried for war crimes and three employees of Australia’s Anvil Mining were tried for complicity in war crimes over the killings. A military court acquitted them all in 2007.

The electric vehicle revolution has fuelled rising demand for cobalt, but human rights groups have raised concerns about a supply chain they say is tainted by child labour and other human rights abuses.

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