Two women artisanal gold miners in Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri Province

Meet Josephine Kibondo and Moza Zawadi, two women artisanal gold miners in Democratic Republic of Congo’s Ituri Province. They share their stories of their life as artisanal miners and, while they say it’s hard work, they rely on the income from artisanal mining to support their families.

Together with Canada’s Carleton University and Uganda’s Development Research and Social Policy Analysis Centre, IMPACT is exploring women’s livelihoods in the artisanal mining of 3Ts (tin, tantalum, tungsten) and gold within the Democratic Republic of Congo.

 

Cobalt Wars

The human cost of the transition to electric vehicles.

The European Parliament voted to ban the sale of carbon-emitting petrol and diesel cars by 2035, pushing forward the transition to electric vehicles. But essential to electric vehicles are rare minerals used in the batteries: Cobalt has become highly important and as demand increases, a scramble for resources is happening in the Democratic Republic of Congo where the world’s largest deposits are found.

Hunter Biden Murky Cobalt Mine Deal in the Democratic Republic of the Congo

President Biden’s son Hunter was found in hot water “again”

In 2016, an investment firm co-founded by Hunter Biden helped a Chinese mining conglomerate get control of a large Congolese cobalt mine from an American company.

According to one of the New York Times stories, Tom Perriello, then a top U.S. envoy to Africa, “sounded alarms” within the State Department in 2016 about the sale of Tenke Fungurume, one of the largest cobalt mines in the world, to China Molybdenum, a global mining company with financing from Chinese state banks. Perriello also raised the issue with the National Security Council, according to the story.

January 19, 2022, Rep. James Comer (R-Ky.), ranking member on the House Oversight and Reform Committee, wrote to the National Archives with a sweeping document request [below], asking for any records or communications from the last two years of the Obama administration discussing cobalt mines, the companies involved in the deal, and Hunter Biden.

I write to request documents regarding Hunter Biden’s involvement in the 2016 sale of a
cobalt mine in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) from an American company to a
Chinese company. Recently, the New York Times published explosive reporting on Hunter
Biden’s role in “helping facilitate a Chinese company’s purchase from an American company
of one of the world’s richest cobalt mines.”1

The American people deserve answers regarding why the Obama Administration—whether at then-Vice President Biden’s behest or not—watched in silence as an American company transferred control of this precious asset to a Chinese conglomerate and why Hunter Biden was—yet again—involved in international matters on which he has no expertise.

President Biden’s son crack cocaine habit

The FBI reportedly possesses Hunter Biden’s laptop containing emails that reveal his foreign business dealings in Ukraine – as well as alleged compromising photos involving sex acts and crack cocaine use.

2022-01-19-Letter-to-NARA-Hunter-Biden-Cobalt-Mine-in-DR-congo

HUNTER BIDEN SMOKING DRUGS

Naked Hunter Biden filmed himself smoking ‘crack’, drinking hard seltzer, and fondling himself while floating inside a sensory deprivation tank – one month after convincing dad Joe to wire him $20,000 for his detox program.

Hunter Biden Smoking Drugs

Read more

This Is Congo

Rare access inside one of the world’s longest-running conflicts

The Democratic Republic of the Congo is home to Africa’s longest continuing conflict. In this film, we followed a whistleblower and a patriotic military commander who provided a visceral, yet intimate, insight into a nation caught between foreign-backed rebels and the government of then-president Joseph Kabila, who ruled until 2019. As the conflict resonates with both men’s lives, the film reveals the insidious legacy of colonialism, resource exploitation and wars that have created a continuing cycle of violence.

A film by Daniel McCabe.

ABC News – The Congo’s Dangerous and Deadly Green Energy Mines

The world is embracing renewable technologies but how much do we know about the metals that are powering this green revolution?

This story exposes the shocking truth about the mining of cobalt, a metal crucial to making the batteries in electric cars, laptops and mobile phones.

The world’s richest deposits of cobalt are in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, one of the poorest countries on earth. It produces around 70% of world output.

This buried treasure has lured hundreds of thousands of Congolese to work in the country’s mines, big and small.

But mining is dangerous, corruption and violence is rife and though child labour has been banned, it’s common.

In recent years, the cobalt trade has been taken over by Chinese companies which operate or finance 15 of the 19 big industrial mines. Locals say that under their management, low safety standards have dropped even further.

“Unfortunately people even are dying for lack of safety,” says an employee of one big company.

Australian reporter Michael Davie travels to this mineral-rich country to investigate the industry – from the major Chinese-owned companies to the conditions of the small-scale workers on the fringes of the big mines.
It’s a dangerous mission and Davie is followed, harassed and arrested by mine and government security officials.

What he uncovers is shocking.

The day he arrives there’s been a mine cave-in, killing at least six miners.

He sees miners tunnel 25 metres underground with no safety equipment.

He meets primary school-age children handling cobalt, a toxic metal which can cause serious health effects.

He meets a mother whose 13-year-old son has just been killed on the fringes of a mine whose embankment collapsed. Companies in the Congo are obliged to make sure they don’t harm the communities around them.

He secures a video which shows a man being beaten by a Congolese soldier as mine managers watch on, laughing.

And he interviews a whistleblower who accuses the Chinese mine he works for of covering up the deaths of co-workers. He also says the country isn’t benefitting from the boom.

“There is no investment coming back in terms of environment, infrastructure…We don’t have road facilities, we don’t have communication. There is nothing.”

But there’s hope amidst the gloom. Davie meets the Good Shepherd Sisters, nuns who’ve set up a school near the mines and educated thousands of children.

“If the children are given education, if schools are spread all over and every child goes to school, then we are redeeming this country,” says one nun.

This is a rare insight into a powerful industry which operates a dangerous business with seeming impunity. All of us use the end products.

Jamaica Fight Against A US Mining Company

The Fight Against A US Mining Company in Jamaica Continues

Jamaica was once the world’s leading exporter of bauxite, which is the ore from which aluminum is made, but decades of mining have taken a toll on the land and the people. With reserves depleted, the government is now pushing to move mining operations into the most ecologically sensitive part of the island known as Cockpit Country. We return to Cockpit Country to get an update on the fight to protect it.

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