Feral Jundi

Friday, December 11, 2009

Congo: The Conflict Mineral Problem and The PMC Solution

Filed under: Africa,Congo — Tags: , , , , — Matt @ 11:15 AM

Changing this situation requires physically securing the major mines and wresting them away from the control of armed groups. This is an urgent priority, but has thus far been ignored by the UN and other actors. 

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     Ok, this one pisses me off.  All of these ‘Save Africa’ organizations, or anti-conflict mineral groups are pretty idealistic, but lack any kind of realistic solutions. Most seem like they are more concerned with raising money to maintain their salaries and organization size, as opposed to promoting any kind of real solutions.

    I took a snippet of a paper written by the Enough Project, which supposedly is the answer to the Congo’s conflict mineral problem.  I thought it was interesting when they started talking about actually ‘securing’ strategic mines, so I thought I would expand upon that. Securing anything requires taking something from someone, and that requires organized violence and offensive capability.

   How do these guys expect to secure anything, with the kind of force they are talking about? MONUC is the solution?  Pffft.  Obviously the folks at the Enough Project have way more faith in the UN’s mission in the Congo than I do, and that is scary.

   Now if we wanted to get serious about securing mines, and especially if those mines are controlled by rebel groups, then it is going to take some capable folks who can do a job like that.

     Ideally it would be a professional army that would take this task on.  But if anyone has been following the news these days, all the professional armies out there are kind of busy right now.  That whole global war on terror thing is really sucking up the man power if you know what I mean.  Plus, I just don’t see anyone jumping up and down, ready to lend their ultra kick ass troops to the UN to do anything.

   Which brings us to the next possible solution, and that is the private military company.  A company like Executive Outcomes is a prime example of the type of PMC I am talking about. If the UN or the Enough Project really wanted a mine secured, and wanted to dry up the financing for these rebel groups, then it could be contracted out, and the task would be accomplished.  This is not conjecture, this is not pie in the sky dreaming, this is reality.  Executive Outcomes actually did secure mines when they were in existence, and in some of the worst areas of Africa, and they were quite good at it.

   I also like to bring up this concept of responsibility to protect, or R2P, my favorite ‘save Africa’ quote.  Born from the ashes of the Rwanda genocide, R2P was the West’s way of saying never again. Whatever……

   Guess what, the war in the Congo is the deadliest war since WW 2, and over five million people have been killed there.  What happened to responsibility to protect?  If we have the means to stop something like this, and it is blatantly obvious that there is a viable solution, then we are not doing everything in our power to stop it.  We are thus allowing a crime against humanity to happen, and on an epic scale. Responsibility to protect should instead be responsibility to do nothing while millions of people are killed.

   So for the folks at the Enough Project, good luck with your hollow strategy.  I am sure it will get you a few donations from some guilt ridden grandma in Michigan with a big fat diamond ring. Better yet, I am sure it will get you invited at a few of those pity parties in hollywood. –Matt

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A Comprehensive Approach to Congo’s Conflict Minerals-Strategy Paper

From the Enough Project

2) Identify and secure strategic mines

The U.N. Group of Experts has documented how armed groups on all sides of the conflict, including the Congolese military, profit from resource exploitation and threaten the local population. They control mines, tax commerce, and prey upon civilians involved in the trade. State mining inspectors are intimidated or co-opted by armed groups and are incapable of reigning in these activities. While MONUC’s mandate has recently been broadened to monitor illicit resource flows, it will take a much more concerted international investment to truly change the security calculus in the mineral-rich areas.

Changing this situation requires physically securing the major mines and wresting them away from the control of armed groups. This is an urgent priority, but has thus far been ignored by the UN and other actors. The recent joint Congo-Rwanda military operation—ostensibly against the FDLR, though direct engagements with the FLDR were infrequent—removal of CNDP leader Laurent Nkunda, and incorporation of CNDP into the local political and military authorities in North Kivu has jolted the status quo. A mutually acceptable security context around the mineral trade in eastern Congo is a critical component of a lasting détente between Kinshasa and Kigali, and the international community has an opportunity in the wake of recent events to support solutions that benefit ordinary Congolese.

Different strategies must be employed for armed groups with diverse origins and agendas. Former CNDP, Mai Mai groups, and non-integrated army brigades may be best dealt with via security sector reform. These efforts are unlikely to completely demilitarize the mining sector in the short-run, but have the best prospects of shifting the status quo toward fostering legitimate trade in the medium-term. In contrast, operations against the FDLR will require much more military strength in a concentrated effort to weaken the FDLR leadership, deny them access to minerals wealth, encourage defections, and protect civilians from reprisals.

In the short-term, poorly planned action by ill-disciplined Congolese forces incapable of protecting civilians or actually holding FDLR territory will only compound already dire circumstances in Congo. But the identification of strategic mining sites can begin now. MONUC should collaborate with the government of Congo in identifying key mining sites under the control of armed groups. Such efforts should not focus on any one militia, but instead should be selected based on size, proximity to transit routes, and the ability of MONUC or trained and vetted Congolese forces to maintain their security.

Securing critical mining sites

There are hundreds of mines controlled by gunpoint in eastern Congo. But these following mines are particularly key to armed groups:

Bisie Mine, Walikale District, North Kivu: Produces the lion’s share of tin ore in North Kivu. Recently shifted hands from the non-integrated 85th Brigade of the Congolese Army—a de facto Mai Mai militia—to an integrated brigade under the command of a CNDP commander, Colonel Manzi. It is unclear whether the new soldiers are physically present in the mines, but they are already active at checkpoints and are taxing miners.

Lueshe Pyrochlore Mine, Rutshuru District, North Kivu: Now under the control of the Congolese Army and CNDP. One of the few industrial mining sites in the Kivus, produces Niobium, which is closely related to Tantalum. One of the sites most immediately conducive to start-up of industrial operations.

Bisembe, Mwenga Territory, South Kivu: Mines around Mwenga are controlled militarily and economically by the FDLR, who have established a mini-state in this region of South Kivu. Securing this area will require significant efforts to sever the FDLR’s military and administrative control, and should only be considered with ample planning, including provisions to protect civilians.

Other important mining areas include the Misisi gold mine in Fizi, South Kivu, tin, tantalum and gold mines in Ziralo, Kalehe South Kivu and the gold mines around Ksugho in North Kivu’s Lubero territory.

 Properly integrated Congolese security forces—supported by MONUC and international military observers—should secure these mining sites and the transit routes associated with their trading chains, including select airfields, ports, and border crossings. To the maximum extent possible, this should be carried out via negotiation and with positive incentives for commanders willing to relinquish their hold over these sites and enter into DDR programs. Such initiatives will require a far more robust approach than prior Congolese demobilization programs, which have wound up providing cover for continued coercive minerals exploitation without reducing its militarization. With thorough vetting to screen for human rights abusers, and following a significant training process, the rank-and-file from armed groups should become eligible for integration into security services. Together with a strengthened MONUC, such a force could provide the immediate physical security necessary to regulate the trade in minerals, from these specific mines to markets to export points in eastern Congo. This approach must be grounded in a more comprehensive and coherent effort to support broad security sector reform in Congo.

From the Enough Project

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Cash The Killer

December 11, 2009

The UN has concluded that the primary problem with violence in eastern Congo is the illegal trade in illegal trade in valuable minerals. For example, Hutu rebel militias control the mining of cassiterite. While the major source is Bolivia, Congo contains large deposits. Cassiterite is a component of tin ore and is used increasingly in electronics. It sells for over nine dollars a pound (nearly $20 per kilogram). The Hutu warlords have established an informal, and illegal, network that mines and transports the cassiterite from eastern Congo to Uganda and Burundi, and eventually the United Arab Emirates, where its enters the world market. This network also supports the mining and smuggling of coltan and wolframite. This trade is similar to the one that supports, or supported, rebel movements in Sierra Leone, Liberia and the Ivory coast. The valuable commodity there was diamonds. The illegal trade in Sierra Leone and Liberia have largely been shut down.

Ivory Coast is another matter. Despite efforts to regulate the “blood diamond” trade, illegal diamond mining in northern Ivory Coast continues, and is a major source of income for the northern rebels. The diamonds are smuggled across the border to Mali, where a network of dealers have well established methods for getting past the diamond industry attempts to stop the sale of “blood diamonds.” There’s little fighting in Ivory Coast, although the potential for renewed violence persists.

Meanwhile, Congo is still an ongoing blood bath. Multiple tribal and political militias, plus an increasing number of bandits, continue to roam the countryside, perpetuating the bloodiest (and least reported) war of the post Cold War era (over five million dead, and counting). Peacekeepers and army action have reduced the size of these violent groups, but not eliminated them. There are now fewer places that the bad guys can roam freely. Attempts to merge rebels into the army has not worked well. The last major problem, a Tutsi militia in the east that will not disarm until the government destroys Hutu militias built around Hutu mass murderers who fled neighboring Rwanda in the 1990s, is being disbanded. But the bandits and warlords are not going to disappear completely. The reason is money, the millions of dollars available each year to whoever has gunmen controlling the mines that extract valuable ores and allow the stuff out of the country. UN peacekeepers are criticized for not fighting more, but that’s not their job. The Congolese army is not up to it yet either, so there it simmers. The UN believes that interrupting the flow of illegal minerals will weaken the rebels sufficiently that the peacekeepers can eliminate the violence. But the minerals trade, like the diamond trade to the west, has proved very resilient.

Story here.

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How Gold Pays For Congo’s Deadly War 

60 Minutes: Killing Continues In The Deadliest War Since WWII As Gold And Other Minerals Pay For Weapons

(CBS)  The price of gold set another all-time record

this past week. There’s demand for gold for

investments, for circuits in cell phones and

computers, and, in this holiday season, for jewelry.

But there’s another price being paid for gold that you

probably haven’t heard about.

Gold and other minerals are funding the deadliest

war since World War II. More than ?ve million

people have died in the Democratic Republic of

Congo. Years ago, the jewelry industry banned the

traf?cking in so-called blood diamonds, but the same

hasn’t happened with gold.

In the heart of central Africa, “60 Minutes” found a

campaign of rape and murder being funded largely

by gold that is exported to the world.

Correspondent Scott Pelley visited a gold mine in eastern Congo, dug from the side of a

mountain by the bare hands and stooped backs of a hundred men. They’ve lifted tons of dirt one

pan at a time, building terraces as they descend. The hunger for gold drives men into the earth so

that other men can kill.

Joining Pelley was Anneke Van Woudenberg, who has spent ten years in Congo. She

investigated the mines for Human Rights Watch and wrote one of the most respected studies

on the trade.

“You know, this is a little bit dangerous business…especially for those guys,” Pelley remarked,

as they maneuvered along one of the narrow mud terraces of the gold mine.

“It’s particularly for those guys,” she replied. “And there are regular mudslides, rock falls. You

know, the death rate is extraordinarily high in these mines.”

Asked what life is like for Congolese miners, Van Woudenberg said, “You make maybe if you’re

lucky a dollar or two a day. You have no health care, no social insurance, you have nothing.

People do this because they hope to become rich, but very few do.”

The people are destitute. But Congo is the Saudi Arabia of minerals. In addition to gold, the

earth is loaded with metals such as tin, copper, and something called coltan that is essential to

the circuits in computers and cell phones.

Our journey started beside Lake Kivu in the teeming city of Bukavu. Eastern Congo is

spectacular, remote and lawless.

To get to the gold ?elds, we traveled through territory controlled by one militia, then another.

We found a gold mine on the Mwana River in the province of South Kivu. The ?rst thing you

notice are the children. Families set them to work early and for many it’s the only life they’ll

know.

Their method for mining is at least 2,000 years old. They lay blankets in the riverbed and let the

sediment collect in the ?bers. The blankets are wrung out and somewhere in all that mud is

treasure.

They mix mercury into the sediment, which chemically binds the gold together. Then they

simply burn the mercury away. No one worries too much about the toxic fumes; the neurological

damage from mercury may not show up for years.

Pelley watched as a mercury burner produced a tiny piece of gold, worth perhaps $5.

The gold is one of the factors driving what is now the deadliest war on Earth.

In 1996, Uganda and Rwanda invaded Congo. Seven more countries joined in and started

stealing Congo’s resources. The invasion ended, but ever since, rebel militias and government

forces have fought over local power, ethnic hatred and control of the minerals.

Story and Video here.

 

2 Comments

  1. I have been an reading the articles you publish for a while, this has been one of my favorite site to go to ever since i got out of 3rd Bn 6th Mar SS plt. The question i really want to ask is do you know of any companies that are working in Africa specifically the Congo that are looking for former Marine Infantry or Marine Snipers? I and several of my friends are finishing up some contracts and we are looking for a chance to go work somwhere other than the middle east. So any info would be appriciated.

    Semper Fidelis,

    Trevor

    Comment by Trevor — Tuesday, February 2, 2010 @ 6:39 AM

  2. Trevor,

    Semper Fi and I am glad you enjoy the site. Jobs are a very popular topic, and the competition is pretty fierce these days. With that said, I still believe guys can get the gigs they want, if they do their do diligence.

    If you want to work in Africa, and get in on the small gigs that no one really knows about, then you will have to network. One way to do that, is go get some training over there, and see if the company can hook you up with directions to go. Ronin is one company that provides some training and access to a network.

    If you have any SA buddies on your current contracts, definitely keep connected with them. Check all the forums every day, at least twice, and sign up with all the pertinent job boards (like Secure Aspects) Get your SIA license too, so that will expand your market and opportunities. A EMT or Paramedic cert would be awesome as well.

    Two areas to check out, are mineral mining companies and aid organizations. Reliefweb is a good resource for aid organizations, and checking the career sections of the major mining and oil companies for security related stuff in Africa is a good hit as well.

    Finally, one company you might want to try is Bancroft Global. They are working in Somalia. Dyncorp just picked up a AFRICAP contract, and check out their career section for that. If you are a sniper, then check out WPPS with DoS, because they are always looking for locked on guys. No guarantee that you will not be placed in the middle east, but you could try to hook up something in Africa once in.

    Good luck and let me know how it goes. Definitely find some African contractors, and pick their brains on what to get into. FFL guys are African-centric, and they could give you some directions as well. It won't be easy though, because Africa is still pretty much driven by the old boy network. -matt

    Comment by headjundi — Tuesday, February 2, 2010 @ 7:13 AM

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