Posts Tagged ‘DRC’

Struggle against conflict minerals continues

January 27th, 2012
Posted by Senior Director, Juliette Terzieff:

Despite the recent departure of a main stakeholder from the Kimberley Process—a standard-setting multistakeholder effort to curb the trade in blood diamonds—similar efforts continue to gain traction on the issue of conflict minerals. The European Union is considering action after the U.S. passed legislation to curb the trade, while the private sector and activist stakeholders simultaneously seek ways to sever the connections between mineral trade, warfare and human rights abuses.

But what happens when implementation of legislation and certification schemes at the local levels is stymied by a lack of infrastructure, corruption and political interests? What is to keep multinational corporations from turning to alternative sourcing to avoid the pitfalls of a lack of local capacity? How do these efforts affect local populations and development? And how long do various stakeholders stay engaged in a process when progress is limited?

Almost a decade after the Kimberley Process came into being to curb the trade in diamonds sold to support deadly conflict, stakeholders are still grappling with such questions. Global Witness, which helped drive the creation of the KP, withdrew from the process in December 2011 in frustration over chronic corruption and the continued ability of human rights abusers to bring their product to market through the KP.

As efforts to stem the flow of conflict minerals move towards systemic shifts in the way the trade is managed, the challenges of the KP may seem all too familiar.

Some American companies like Apple, Inc. are looking to stop the sourcing of any minerals from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) in order to prevent conflict minerals from reaching its products—the opposite effect U.S. legislators intended with the Dodd-Frank Act. As much as 90 percent of the previous level of DRC exports have ceased as multinationals back away for to avoid running afoul of pending reporting rule associated with the Act. Hewlett-Packard, Inc. has also joined Apple, Inc. in stopping the flow of potential conflict minerals from reaching its products.

The Dodd-Frank Act, which came into being July 2010, requires the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to force companies to report all minerals, such as tin, gold, and tungsten, used in their products—cell phones, computers, GPS systems—and where those minerals come from, even trace amounts, to prove such minerals were derived from a “conflict free” area of the DRC. Legislators hoped this would pressure DRC rebel groups and other combatants that profit from the trade but has shaken up the international mineral markets.

If you go from compliance on through, this starts to set up not only nightmare scenarios, but also costly scenarios that make it difficult for companies to ensure an adequate supply of raw materials,” Tom Quaadman, Vice President of the Chamber of Commerce’s Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness, said.

AT&T has criticized the Dodd-Frank as too broad and raising concerns the new requirements “could trip up companies who contract with manufacturers and have little, if any, control or knowledge about the origins of minor amounts of minerals that end up in their products.”

The United Nation’s (UN) Group of Experts stated in a report that the situation has helped further entrench corruption and made the situation worse by leaving many DRC exporters “bereft of their main, or only customers, and therefore incomes.”

In late December 2011, a UN report confirmed that the “crackdown” on conflict minerals has pushed “trade deeper into the hands of criminals and smugglers “including former rebel officials who are now in the Congolese army. The report warns, “(It) appears to have increased the need for fraudulent operators to seek or accept military assistance in their mineral smuggling operations” and suggests a rise in the smuggling of conflict minerals into Rwanda because Rwanda’s reported production is much higher than what industry analysts deem realistically possible.

Several groups, companies and attorneys “have urged the SEC to phase in the new rules over time to help make it easier to comply,” as well as “narrow the scope of the rule” so the corporation won’t have to “track trace amounts of minerals.” However, human rights groups oppose a “phase-in” period and state that the “SEC needs to follow the Dodd-Frank mandate and implement the rule without delay.” Since the rule is a legal requirement, the SEC can’t stray from its intent.

Amol Mehra, coordinator of the International Corporate Accountability Roundtable, said, “Businesses should be held accountable for human rights issues, and investors find these concerns to be material in that they, at the end of the day, affect companies’ image and bottom line. All companies need to do…is simply tell us what is in their products.”

The challenges facing efforts to remove conflict minerals from the global supply chains of major multinationals are significant but doing nothing is simply no longer an option—and that is a point that stakeholders from across the spectrum continue to agree upon.

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ICT helps advance humanitarian goals

January 24th, 2012
Post by Senior Director, Juliette Terzieff:

Technology has emerged as an integral element of humanitarian response efforts around the world in recent years—put to use in both emergency situations and in efforts to address chronic issues. Almost gone are the days when aid groups and disaster responders operating in hostile or remote environments had to wait days or weeks for information transfers that could save lives. Not only are ICT tools and the Internet changing how aid organizations and the public respond to crises, but they are also helping the global humanitarian community better predict and pre-plan accelerated response efforts.

The potential reach of technology is near limitless and can be applied to any issue. Around the world development experts and organizations are using technology to drive initiatives on education, health care and poverty reduction. The information and capacity that these efforts create feeds directly into the humanitarian community’s ability to manage crises.

The United Nations’ World Food Programme is employing electronic vouchers to fight malnutrition in Zimbabwe for HIV-positive patients and their families. The electronic food voucher, introduced by the WFP, and implemented by Zimbabwean authorities and NGOs, identifies malnourished patients and gives them vouchers they can use to purchase food at designated shops. Zimbabwe’s economic woes of the last decade have left many HIV/AIDS patients undergoing antiretroviral treatment unable to feed themselves and their families, and the program has helped around 570,000 Zimbabweans since it began.

WFP is also using technology more broadly, expanding the organization’s 2005 video game Food Force to fight against hunger by teaming up with Konami Digital. Released 30 November 2011, the game’s most recent version can be found on the social networking website Facebook in both English and Japanese.

Global positioning systems (GPS) provide early weather warnings for areas like Nepal to map health facilities and plan disaster response in the event of a major earthquake. Mobile operator Airtel in Bangladesh “has teamed up with the Campaign for Sustainable Rural Livelihoods,” as well as three other organizations—Oxfam, CARE, and the Center for Global Change—providing fisherman at sea with the early weather warnings using GPS.

In India, scientists are developing a handheld, battery-powered device that can take a sample of urine, blood, or sputum, process it, and alert a health worker whether a feverish child has malaria, dengue or a bacterial infection. Projects such as these can help eliminate some of the logistical challenges with accessing care for impoverish or rural communities.

Text messaging is being used to raise awareness on human rights issues. The Burkina Faso Red Cross, for example, uses text messages to remind government officials, employers, traditional leaders, business owners and others about rights abuses associated with the “exploitation of domestic workers.”

In the Democratic Republic of Congo, Geographic Information System (GIS) software is used to “map artisanal mining sites, transportation routes, and mineral trading points” as part of efforts to reform the mining sector. Security and human rights issues on the ground are also monitored using the software. The DRC has been the center of a global battle against the trade in “conflict minerals”—tin, tantalum, gold and others—that has been used to finance massive human rights abuses and bloody conflict.

A major component of how technology is being adapted for humanitarian purposes efforts is ways in which it can be used to streamline information rapidly and unify the efforts of various organizations and individuals.

When the crisis broke in Libya, humanitarian workers and decision-makers realized they didn’t have real time information regarding the events happening within the country. The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) teamed up with the Ushahidi initiative, a project that ultimately set new standards to map crises and aid response plans through the use of social and traditional media information. The effort, which relied on 150 volunteers skilled on crisis mapping to manage data coming from within Libya, resulted in the LibyaCrisisMap.net.

Given that the UN had virtually no access to the country, we now had situational awareness,” Andrej Verity, information management officer at OCHA in Geneva, said. “And, within 48 hours, we had 100-plus response activities collected and compiled – the same amount of data [that] took about four weeks in the Philippines, two weeks in Haiti, and two weeks in Pakistan to be made available.”

Technology has also changed the way caring members of the public around the world are able to help when disaster strikes. As massive natural disasters struck with little warning in 2010 and 2011, aid groups and people around the world turned to social media and other technological tools to help people in Haiti, Pakistan and Japan find missing relatives, and to identify emergency needs and raise funds for relief efforts. In Kenya, an initiative using mobile phones to facilitate cash transfer services—“Kenyans for Kenya”—raised over US $7 million during a period of drought that affected northern and eastern parts of the country.

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Global Witness departure damages Kimberley Process

January 5th, 2012
Posted by Senior Director, Juliette Terzieff:

Global Witness recently made a difficult decision to withdraw from its official observatory position of the Kimberley Process (KP) over concerns the scheme was serving “an accomplice to diamond laundering“—a process by which dirty diamonds are mixed with clean ones en route to international markets. The withdrawal of a key stakeholder from an international process to curb the trade in products used to fund deadly conflict raises concerns not only for the integrity of the multistakeholder process that has driven the KP’s evolution, but for efforts on other supply chain issues such as the trade in conflict minerals.

The KP, which Global Witness helped form in 2003, was initially created due to conflicts in Sierra Leone and Angola where the trade in rough diamonds was used to fund conflict and drive massive human rights abuses, to help regulate the sale of certified rough diamonds and remove “blood diamonds” from the international market.

Global Witness’ main concern ahead of the recent withdrawal was KP’s decision in late 2011 “to allow Zimbabwe to export diamonds from the Marange fields, which has been singled out repeatedly by international human rights stakeholders as an area where local government officials are colluding in extensive human rights violations and national authorities have little interest in cleaning up the practices. The NGO also claimed that KP failed to evolve and didn’t address any “clear links between diamonds, violence and tyranny” during the past nine years.

Charmian Gooch, founding director of Global Witness, said in a statement, “Nearly nine years after the Kimberley Process was launched, the sad truth is that most consumers still cannot be sure where their diamonds come from, nor whether they are financing armed violence or abusive regimes.

“The scheme has failed three tests: it failed to deal with the trade in conflict diamonds from Ivory Coast, was unwilling to take serious action in the face of blatant breaches of the rules over a number of years by Venezuela, and has proved unwilling to stop diamonds fuelling corruption and violence in Zimbabwe.”

The decision by KP helps pave the ways for others like Anjin Investment, a Chinese-Zimbabwean company, to sell millions of dollars worth of diamonds from the country. There have been allegations Zimbabwean army officers hold senior positions in Anjin, and that some high-ranking officials—top military personnel such as Emmerson Mnangagwa, General Constantine Chiwenga of the Zimbabwe National Army (ZNA), and Colonel Sedz—are “involved in the daily management and operations of [Anjin].”

Gooch reported, “Over the last decade, elections in Zimbabwe have been associated with the brutal intimidation of voters. Orchestrating this kind of violence costs a lot of money. As the country approaches another election there is a very high risk of Zanu PF hardliners employing these tactics once more and using Marange diamonds to foot the bill. The Kimberley Process’s refusal to confront this reality is an outrage.”

Anne Dunnebacke, senior campaigner at Global Witness, stated that “the Zimbabwe incident was the catalyst for the organization’s withdrawal,” but that it wasn’t the only reason.

“We’ve been pushing for reform within the process on a number of issues for many years,” Dunnebacke said. “Over the course of the nine years some improvements have been made and we’ve seen instances where reforms have been adopted. But in recent years that has not been the case. There is next to no political will by governments or industry to reform and make it credible.”

Dunnebacke believes that in order for the industry to take action, a different kind of pressure needs to be applied and vowed Global Witness would remain part of broader campaigns to reform the diamond trade. She claims the industry has stepped back with the excuse, “‘We have the Kimberley Process for diamonds, so that’s that—we’ve solved the problem of blood diamonds.’”

Global Witness has 50 participants worldwide, including the European Union (EU) and the United States (US), with more than 70 countries as its members, who “account for around 99.8 percent of the global production of rough diamonds,” and have all “signed the Kimberley Process agreement to adhere to United Nations-backed safeguards on trade” in the rough diamond field.

Farai Maguwu, director of the Center for Research and Development (CRD) that is based in Zimbabwe, believes that while Global Witness withdrawing wouldn’t collapse the entire KP system, it was “a very big blow.”

Maguwu was arrested in 2010 “as an enemy of the state…allegedly for ‘endangering national security’ by holding information pertaining to the Zimbabwean military’s gross human rights violation at Marange’s diamond mines,” but was cleared of the charges after several civil society movements and local and international NGOs lobbied on his behalf.

“The Kimberley Process will never be the same,” Maguwu said of the Global Witness withdrawal. “A very influential member of the Kimberley Process has cast a vote of no confidence.”

Michael Mann, Catherine Ashton’s spokesman for the EU’s high representative for foreign affairs and security policy, in early December, and after Global Witness withdrew from KP, sent out an e-mail stating that while the KP “may not be a perfect instrument, …it is the best we have, and therefore all parties, including civil society, should work to make it effective.” Mann included, “Abandoning it doesn’t help achieve that common goal.”

The United States became chairman of the KP in the last rotation, a position which was last held by the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). The DRC’s tenure at the helm was also controversial given that the country is at the heart of trade in “conflict minerals”—tin, tantalum, gold and others—that are the current subject of vociferous campaigning by human rights stakeholders and multistakeholder efforts to address concerns.

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Tapping DRC youth to power change

May 6th, 2011
Posted by Senior Director, Juliette Terzieff: 

Local stakeholders in the Democratic Republic of Congo are working to build local capacity for sustainable change –with an emphasis on the country’s youth and the opportunities ICT tools provide to raise Congolese voices.

“Local organizations on the ground are often overlooked, yet it is through the strengthening of local entities that true change and stability is possible,” says Maurice Carney of Friends of the Congo (FotC).

Local stakeholders face a broad array of challenges in their work. Security across the DRC is shaky, at best, even in areas where armed combat isn’t a daily occurrence. While international efforts to address violence in DRC as it relates to the trade in “conflict minerals” such as tantalum, tungsten, tin and gold have intensified with action from the U.S. government, multinational electronics companies and others, the violence is unlikely to end anytime soon.

Tens of thousands of people have fled eastern DRC flooding into cities like Kinshasa where crime and abject poverty are standard challenges. Corruption and bribery are rampant. The DRC also has a marked lack of infrastructure –from roads, to water supply, to telecommunications.

Yet no one knows better the kind of change needed in the DRC than the people who live there.

And with an estimated 40 million residents under the age of 18, DRC’s youth have the potential to mobilize into a formidable force.

One such program –the Youth Project –being championed by FotC is looking to harness that potential and turn it into real power.

Beginning with one social network cell based out of Kinshasa, a core team of ten Congolese have created the opportunity for young Congolese to tap into the Internet and the array of tools –like Skype, Facebook and Twitter –that are available to help them raise their voices to a global audience. Participants are encouraged blog, vlog or create videos highlighting the issues that mean the most to them. Because many of the participants have little or no experience with ICT tools or virtual community building, administrators provide training and development support that covers everything from basic operation of computers and cameras, to life lessons that emphasize self-sufficiency to push for change.

FotC hopes to see the program go nationwide and is working with the core team to explore ways to make the program itself self-sufficient.

“The reality of the situation on the ground is stark. If the people of the country aren’t empowered to make their own change then the situation will perpetuate…and the youth are key,” believes Carney.

Capacity remains a challenge –with the fledgling network currently reliant on a modem that can connect four computers, and sporadic electricity supply. While the administrators have a generator to use during power outages, finding fuel for it is a constant challenge.

Even though Africa is home to around 400 million cellular telephone subscribers, it remains the world’s least “wired” continent. Research, like this study from the University of Cape Town, shows the relationship between Internet access and economic growth –and as the world has witnessed over the last five months ICT tools can also help power social change.

In addition to their own programs, FotC is lending support to efforts of other local organizations helping put together “Ruined: A Mother’s Day Fundraiser” in Washington, D.C. to benefit two south Kivu-based groups, the Association of Widows and Congo Restoration. The event will feature a performance of the Pulitzer-prize winning play “Ruined,” followed by a panel discussion with the play’s actors and women from the DRC.

The Association of Widows provides a variety of services to the local communities including health care, skill building opportunities and child-care. Congo Restoration works exclusively with war orphans and female victims of violence, providing help with basic survival needs, training and education.

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Tackling DRC Conflict Minerals?

April 10th, 2011

Posted by Senior Director Juliette Terzieff:

A new set of rules for mineral suppliers in Central Africa backed by the world’s leading electronics companies came into effect April 1 in a bid to remove conflict minerals from international supply chains and end the trade’s contribution to violence in the Democratic Republic of Congo. While the Conflict-Free Smelter Program has broad support from stakeholders, there is near universal acknowledgement that the effort will only ultimately be successful as part of a comprehensive multi-pronged approach to ending the association between DRC minerals and conflict.

Mineral trade in the DRC has been a central feature of conflict in the country – with combatant groups locked in deadly battles for control of mines, perpetrating abuses against local populations to ensure control and using profits from the trade to obtain weapons and drive armed conflict.

For years activist stakeholders have applied pressure on governments and industry to take action and keep so-called conflict minerals out of the international supply chain. The electronics industry in particular – which uses DRC-sourced minerals to produce a variety of consumer products including cellular telephones, GPS and computers — has faced intense pressure to find an effective way to address the issue.

And now the time may have come.

The Conflict-Free Smelter Program requires participating mineral processing players in the DRC and neighboring countries to provide proof their supply purchases do not contribute to conflict in the DRC by funding militia groups or other armed combatants. The program, developed by the Electronics Industry Citizenship Coalition (EICC) and the Global e-Sustainability Initiative (GeSI), covers tin, tungsten, gold and coltan.

While the program is voluntary both for smelters and buyers, the creators expect companies from other industries will use the system, or something similar to it, as other regulatory requirements come into force. U.S. companies will be required to provide accountings of the mineral supply in their products under reporting provisions of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act due as of 2012. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission regulations to implement the provisions were expected April 15, but have now likely been delayed by as much as three months.

The April 1 Conflict-Free Smelter Program launch met with immediate, but in some cases tempered, support from stakeholders.

“We believe it is a step in the right direction that companies are cleaning up their supply chain,” says Kambale Musavuli from Friends of the Congo, a Congolese youth group that emphasizes the use of technology to drive change. “We also don’t think it will have an impact on the conflict but more so create a de facto ban of Congo’s minerals thus allowing more illegal smuggling of Congo’s minerals.”

Indeed within a couple days of the program’s official launch NGO observers began receiving reports from the DRC that militia commanders were finding it challenging to find willing buyers for their product. Until domestic and regional verification systems can be put in place, however, most stakeholders agree militias will find ways to get their product into the export stream.

Buyers for Chinese, Indian and other countries’ manufacturers who are not part of the program or subject to U.S. legislative requirements coming in effect in early 2012 face no regulatory requirements to ensuring their purchases are conflict-free. This could prove particularly valuable for those seeking to sidestep controls given that Chinese demand for minerals like copper are predicted to rise 7% every year between 2010 and 2014.

Other powerful private and public stakeholders are working to create and implement additional elements of a more comprehensive strategy to end the use of conflict minerals. The Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) and the United Nations, for example, have been working on tracing and certification programs. The International Tin Research Institute began implementation of the first phase of a tracing program in 2009 that it has been working with Congolese authorities, representatives from other industries and stakeholders on to refine and increase effectiveness.

Supporters of the efforts hope the initiatives will apply pressure on the DRC government to demilitarize mining sites and throw genuine support behind tracing programs. But some observers worry the pressure will merely push DRC mining enterprises towards less-restrictive markets and do little to alleviate the poverty and conflict that afflicts the country.

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Avoiding a Repeat Performance

June 21st, 2010

 

Will Afghanistan’s mineral wealth result in the world’s next Conflict Mineral scenario?

By Juliette Terzieff

From cellular telephone to computers, from jewelry to medical devices, minerals sourced in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) make their way into dozens of types of consumer products every year. But the competition to control the land and mines home to some of the world’s largest deposits of tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold – collectively known as “Conflict Minerals” – drives violence, environmental degradation and human rights abuses. Proceeds from the sales fund armed groups vying for control.

It’s an abysmal situation – a flip-flopped jumble that sees an opportunity to enrich the lives of Congolese and fund development instead disintegrated into a nightmare scenario.

Multinational corporations in the electronics, aerospace, extractive, medical device, automotive and retail sectors have emerged as targets – and partners — in what is one of the most active and concentrated activist campaigns of this new decade.

(more…)

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