Armed Conflict, mineral transportation routes, minerals trade, natural resources and armed conflict, supply chains, Congo, Democratic Republic, International Trade & Trade Rules
Coming Clean: How Supply Chain Controls can Stop Congo's Minerals Trade Fuelling Conflict

Global Witness research in eastern Congo highlights efforts by companies and Congolese officials to lay the foundations of a conflict-free minerals trade in the shadow of entrenched military control and impunity.

For nearly 15 years abusive armed groups, including factions of the Congolese national army, have preyed on the trade in tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold to fund a brutal war in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The region’s natural resource wealth is not the root cause of the violence, but competition over the lucrative minerals trade has become an incentive for all warring parties to continue fighting. The local population in North and South Kivu provinces have borne the brunt of a conflict characterised by murder, pillage, mass rape and displacement.

Link: http://www.globalwitness.org/sites/default/files/120531_Coming%20Clean_lowres.pdf
Added by View user profileMoushumi Biswas on June 3, 2012