Scores die in DRC mining
accident
Excavators and drills at work in an open pit at a copper and cobalt mine in Congo's copper-producing south |
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, at least 43 artisanal
miners have been killed by a landslide at a copper and cobalt mine run by the
Anglo-Swiss mining giant Glencore.
By Linda Bordoni
The mine, where the latest accident occurred, spans a vast,
flat expanse on the outskirts of the Congolese city of Kolwezi near the
southern border with Zambia. It is one of the largest high-grade copper assets
in the world.
The chief of staff to the governor of the province where the
landslide happened said search and rescue operations continue as it is thought
other bodies are still under the rubble.
The accident occurred in an open-pit mine at the Kamoto
Copper Company concession in which Glencore subsidiary Katanga Mining has
a 75% stake.
Illegal mining
Officials said the miners caught up in the landslide were on
the site illegally without approval or permits. So-called illegal mining is
common in DRC and across Africa where old-fashioned and unregulated mining
methods can compromise safety, and cost scores of lives each year.
A union official said the Company had put up red warning
signs where a crack in part of the pit had been noticed, but the diggers had
ignored them.
The army meanwhile has been deployed in the area to deter
artisanal miners from entering, a move human rights activists said could stoke
tension and lead to clashes.
Electric car batteries
Thousands of illegal miners operate in and around mines in
southern Congo, which produce more than half of the world's cobalt, a key
component in electric car batteries.
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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