Democratic Republic of the Congo – DRC
Independent from Belgium since 1961, the DRC is at the heart of
 the equatorial region of Sub-Saharan Africa and includes 47% of the 
continent's forest. The Congo River and its tributaries form an economic
 lifeline. The population of 71 million is split into many ethnic groups
 and it is also divided by at least 210 languages – but mainly French, 
Lingala, Kiswahili, Kikongo and Tshiluba. 
   
 
The DRC is home to vast reserves of a wide variety of natural 
mineral resources such as cobalt, copper, gold, tin and diamonds. DRC is
 believed to contain about 4% of the world’s copper reserves and 
one-third of its cobalt reserves. All mineral deposits in the DRC are 
state-owned and the holder of mining rights also gains ownership of the 
mineral products for sale. Governed by the National Mining Code, the 
Ministry of Mines regulates the Mining Registry, Directorate of Mines 
and the Geological Directorate. The country is the world’s second 
largest diamond exporter by volume and the fifth-largest producer. 
Significant investment in project development and production is
 taking place in the DRC. Major copper projects in Katanga include the 
Tenke Fungurume mine (130kt copper production expected 2011), the 
Kinsevere copper mine (planned 60ktpa copper production). Major gold 
projects include the Banro Corporation Twangiza mine and the Randgold 
Resources/Anglogold Ashanti Kibali mine (both scheduled for production 
in 2014). 
   
Environment, Health, Safety and Sustainability Policy
 
Casa Mining aims to be a positive force for African gold 
exploration within the local communities where it operates, working with
 all major stakeholders. The Company makes social responsibility a key 
part of its activities, and is currently creating a formal social 
development organisation that will work in parallel with exploration, 
and later development, activities. 4% of exploration expenditure is 
presently spent on Social Programs. 
Casa is committed to following the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human Rights; Casa’s policy can be viewed here. 
The Company aims: 
- To encourage its employees and contractors to work with local
 communities to ensure that lasting benefits remain in the area as a 
result of our presence.
 
- To prioritise local employment, both directly and indirectly.
 
- For its employees and contractors to treat local communities 
with respect, and to build positive relationships with stakeholders.
 
- To ensure that the protection of the environment is considered and made a priority in all its activities.
 
- To ensure that resources are utilized efficiently and effectively for the benefit of the Company and stakeholders.
 
 
CASA works to understand in advance the impact of its planned 
activities. This facilitates planning to minimize impacts and ensures 
that appropriate remediation measures can be selected. Each project 
feasibility study will include an environmental impact study, and mine 
management and closure plans, which are to include environmental 
remediation requirements. These studies are conducted to international 
standards by independent consultants. During development and operations 
these documents will be continuously reviewed. 
At the Misisi prospect, CASA has completed a socio-economic 
study, stakeholder analysis and environmental review as the first step 
in developing an appropriate and sustainable social and environment 
plan. It is now working to initiate community projects in conjunction 
with Community Councils, including collaboration on road reconstruction,
 health education, and school improvements. Follow up will ensure that 
benefit is sustained. 
 
  
     
Welcome to Kilo Goldmines
Kilo Goldmines Ltd (Kilo) is an exploration and resource development 
company with gold and iron ore prospects and resources in the 
northeastern portion of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) and a 
non-participatory, subject to dilution interest (20%) in an iron ore 
prospect in Afghanistan, namely the "Hajigak Project". 
 
We are listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange - Ventures ("TSX-V") under the symbol 'KGL' and on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange under the symbol '02K'. Our corporate strategy is to advance solely, or in partnership, our gold and iron ore
 prospects and resources, in what is defined as the "Kilo-Moto" region, a
 semi-continuous Archaean Kabalian greenstone belt in the northeast DRC. 
 
 
 
In the northeast DRC, we have delineated a 1.87 Moz NI 43-101 inferred gold resource estimate on our Imbo Licence, one of the eight exploitation licences which form part of the greater "Somituri Project".
 We are now delineating a number of other highly prospective targets 
within a 5 km radius of this resource, with the ultimate objective 
being; to grow the gold resource base on this licence significantly and 
create a multi-pit operating mine of regional significance. 
 
 
Whilst we believe that Afghanistan offers advantages as an investment opportunity,
 we firmly believe that the DRC is significantly underdeveloped with 
respect to its resource potential and represents a significant business opportunity for early entrants and for those who understand how to operate in this country. 
 
Due to civil wars post independence, the DRC has been starved of 
foreign direct investment (FDI), right through to 2006 and 2007. Since 
this time however, the DRC has seen significant growth in FDI and we as a
 company believe that the economic, legal and political enablers are now
 in place for this to continue, see "FDI Graph" (ANAPI) and "GDP Growth Graph" (Economy Watch). 
 
  
 
 
 
Loncor Resources Inc. 
  
  
Loncor Resources Inc. is a gold exploration company
focused on the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The Company has
exclusive gold rights to an area covering 2,087 square kilometres located along
the Ngayu Archaean greenstone belt in Orientale province. Loncor also owns or
controls 55 exploration permits in North Kivu province, covering 17,760 square
kilometers and located west of the city of Butembo. Both areas have historical gold
production. Loncor's current focus is its Ngayu Project.
   
A Mineral Resource Estimate was completed for Loncor's Makapela Project in
April 2012 - 4.1 million tonnes grading 7.59 g/t Au containing 1 million ounces
of gold.  
Profile
http://www.loncor.com/s/Profile.asp
  
Loncor Resources Inc. is a gold exploration company focused on the
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). The Company has exclusive gold rights
to an area covering 2,087 square kilometres located along the Ngayu Archaean
greenstone belt in Orientale province. Loncor also owns or controls 55
exploration permits in North Kivu province, covering 17,760 square kilometers
and located west of the city of Butembo. 
 
  
Loncor's leading project is Ngayu, located in Orientale
Province of the DRC, 270 kilometres
northeast of Kisangani.
The project covers parts of the Ngayu Archaean greenstone belt. A number of
gold occurrences are found within the Ngayu greenstone belt, one of the two
most significant described in the literature being the Yindi gold occurrence, which
occurs within permits where Loncor has the gold rights. 
  
 
The Company's leading prospect in North Kivu
is Manguredjipa. It is estimated that between 1925 and 1960, approximately
300,000 oz of alluvial gold was produced in the Manguredjipa area from various
tributaries of the Lenda drainage system. These alluvial targets eventually led
to the discovery of numerous primary gold deposits in the Manguredjipa area.
Other gold prospects warranting follow up in North Kivu
include Lutunguru, Lubero, Makwasu, Lutela, Bilolo, Manzia, Mohanga and
Lundjulu. 
 
   
 
Loncor began drilling at the Yindi Prospect in September 2010 and at the
Makapela Prospect at Ngayu a month later. Surface exploration work began at
Manguredjipa in August 2009 and is ongoing. 
 
 
  
Management
 
Peter Cowley
President and CEO 
Peter Cowley is a geologist with 40 years international experience 
in the minerals industry, mainly in Africa. Mr. Cowley was President and
 CEO of Banro Corporation from June 2004 to 2008, where he led the 
exploration program that delineated 11 million ounces of gold along the 
Twangiza-Namoya gold belt. Prior to joining Banro, Mr. Cowley was 
Managing Director of Ashanti Exploration, where he oversaw the 
exploration of the Geita mine in Tanzania, which resulted in 17 million 
ounces being delineated. He holds M.Sc and M.B.A. degrees and is a 
Fellow of I.M.M.M. Mr. Cowley is also a director of Cluff Gold plc and 
Banro Corporation.    
 
 
Arnold T. Kondrat
Executive Vice President 
The founder of both Loncor and Banro, Mr. Kondrat has been involved 
in corporate finance activities for over 20 years. He is also President 
and Managing Director of Sterling Portfolio Securities Inc., a private 
venture capital firm based in Toronto.    
 
 
Howard Fall
Exploration Manager 
Mr. Fall is a professional geologist with more than 30 years of 
experience in various countries in Africa. Previous to his role with 
Loncor, Mr. Fall served as Exploration Manager for Banro Corporation (11
 million ounces of gold delineated), Anglogold Ashanti and Gencor. Mr. 
Fall also led the exploration team which discovered the Ahafo and Akym 
deposits in Ghana, West Africa, totalling some 20 million ounces.    
 
 
Fabrice Matheys
General Manager, DRC 
Mr. Matheys is a professional geologist with more than 21 years of 
experience in Africa. Prior to his role with Loncor, Mr. Matheys served 
as Exploration Geologist for De Beers in Botswana, West Africa and South
 Africa and spent eight years as Exploration Manager in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo with exploration programs focused on gold, 
diamonds, niobium and tungsten.    
 
 
Mark Hannam
Chief Geologist 
Mr Hannam is a professional geologist with more than 35 years of 
experience in Africa including seven years in Tanzania with Anglogold 
Ashanti focused on the Geita Greenstone Belt, eight years in the DRC at 
Mongbwalu with Anglogold Ashanti and at Twangiza with Banro Corporation.
    
 
 
Désiré Sangara
Government Relations 
Mr. Sangara manages Loncor's government relations and is based in 
Kinshasa. Mr. Sangara also serves as Banro's Vice-President, Government 
Relations. He has a Master's degree in management from E.D.C. (Paris) 
and has over 17 years professional experience in the Democratic Republic
 of the Congo's exploration and mining sector. He previously held senior
 positions with the Belgium-Luxemburg mining company, Mindev, and with 
Ashanti Goldfields, where he was the company's country manager for seven
 years.    
 
 
Donat Madilo
Chief Financial Officer 
Mr. Madilo has more than 17 years of experience in finance and 
administration and holds a Bachelor of Commerce (Honours) from Institut 
Supérieur de Commerce de Kinshasa, a B.Sc. (Licence) in Applied 
Economics from University of Kinshasa and an Honours Master of Science 
in Accounting from Roosevelt University in Chicago.    
 
 
Naomi Nemeth
Vice President, Investor Relations 
Ms. Nemeth is a seasoned investor relations professional with more 
than 25 years' experience, the majority of which has been focused on the
 mining industry with companies such as Desert Sun Mining (acquired by 
Yamana Gold), Wolfden Resources (acquired by Zinifex), African Copper, 
Homeland Energy and Continental Gold. Naomi began her career as a 
geologist working in the Yukon, Northwest Territories and Ontario and 
has an undergraduate degree in geology and biology from Brock University
 and a Master's degree in journalism from the University of Western 
Ontario.    
 
 
Martin Jones
Loncor Foundation 
Mr. Jones served as Vice President, Corporate Development, with 
Banro for seven years following a career as a consultant in corporate 
communications. In 2007, Mr. Jones took over management of the Company's
 registered charity, the Banro Foundation, and in 2011, became the 
Foundation's Chairman. The award-winning Banro Foundation has been 
formally recognized in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Canada 
for its contributions to social and economic reconstruction in the 
Congo. Mr. Jones advises and supports the management of the Loncor 
Foundation, and is actively involved in furthering this foundation's 
mandate to ensure that local communities share in the benefits of 
mineral development through initiatives to promote social and economic 
development, as well as through job creation and skills development.    
 
 
  
 
 
Loncor Resources Projects
July - September 2012 
click to enlarge 
 
Makapela Prospect, Ngayu Project
November - December 2010 
Drilling at the Makapela prospect, Ngayu Project, began in early 
November. Below are recent photographs of the Makapela diamond drilling 
program and of core samples containing visible gold from the North Pit. 
click to enlarge 
 
Yindi Prospect
September 2010 
In September 2010, Loncor invited a group of financial analysts and 
investors
on a tour of the Ngayu Project. Below are photos of the Yindi prospect 
at Ngayu taken during the visit. These show drilling operations - two 
drills are currently deployed - the core shack, core cutting and core 
samples, the tents and kitchen and office buildings at the Yindi 
exploration camp, and a number of adits created during the colonial era. 
Project Geology
 
Introduction
The Ngayu project covers an area of 2,087 square kilometres and is 
found within the Orientale Province of northeast DRC, some 270 
kilometres northeast of Kisangani and 380 kilometres west of Lake Albert
 on the border with Uganda. The project covers prospective parts of the 
Ngayu Archaean greenstone belt, which is one of a number of greenstone 
belts in the north-east Congo Archaean craton and includes the Kilo and 
Moto greenstone belts. These Archaean greenstone belts are the 
northwestern extensions of the Lake Victoria greenstone belt terrain 
which hosts a number of world class gold deposits, including Geita, 
North Mara and Bulyanhulu that were found and developed during the 
1990s. 
Loncor's Ngayu project property location 
  click to view larger version >
 
 
Loncor Resources Inc. has an option agreement with Rio Tinto Exploration
 RDC Orientale SPRL for the exclusive gold rights at Ngayu covering 13 
PRs ("Permits de Reserches" - exploration permits) totaling 2,087 square
 kilometres. Initially, Loncor's option agreement had an area of 4,550 
square kilometers and covered most of the Ngayu belt but after a 
regional assessment of the belt, using airborne geophysical and 
geochemical surveys over a two year period, the area was reduced in 
February 2012 to 2,087 square kilometers. 
 
Ngayu Project Infrastructure and Legal Tenure Plan 
  click to view larger version >
 
 
Exploration commenced at Ngayu in the first quarter of 2010 following construction of the main field camp at Yindi. 
 
A two pronged exploration strategy has been undertaken over the last two
 years at Ngayu: ground follow up (gridding, soil and auger sampling, 
pitting, trenching, geological mapping and core drilling) of known 
prospects within the Ngayu PRs such as Makapela, Yindi and Itali; and 
regional reconnaissance geochemical (Bulk Leach Extractable Gold, 
"BLEG") and airborne geophysical  and remote sensing techniques in 
corporation with Newmont under a Technical Services Agreement to target 
additional new prospects in this densely forest terrain. 
 
The Ngayu Greenstone Belt has a length of approximately 80 kilometres 
and a width of 40 kilometres and bears geological similarities to the 
Geita Archaean greenstone belt of Tanzania. In terms of size, the Ngayu 
belt is approximately three to four times the size of Geita, where the 
gold deposits which currently total 17 million ounces are found within 
banded ironstone formations ("BIF") or in close proximity to the BIF in 
other host lithologies. Similarly, the Ngayu project has well developed 
BIFs with a total potential prospective strike length of 130 km. 
 
Ngayu Project: Archean Greenstone Belt geology with similarities to 
the prolific Geita Greenstone Belt in Tanzania (black line is original 
Loncor property boundary, prior to February 2012) 
  click to view larger version >
 
 
A number of gold occurrences are found within the Ngayu greenstone belt,
 including the Company's current most advanced prospect, Makapela (more 
information on Makapela is available in the Map section of this page, 
below), Yindi and Itali. Yindi and the Imva Fold area have been the 
sites of historical alluvial and hardrock gold production during 
colonial times and Kilo Gold's Adumbi deposit is to the east of the 
Ngayu belt. 
 
The following prospects, with details below, are located within Loncor's Ngayu Project area: 
Makapela Prospect 
Yindi Prospect 
Itali Propsect  
 MWANA PROFILE
Mwana Africa PLC is a pan-African, multi-commodity resources 
company focused on the production, development and exploration of gold, 
nickel, copper and diamonds. 
 
   
 Mwana is carrying out an exploration programme on vast copper prospective land in the Katanga region of the DRC. 
	Directors
	Executive Directors:
 
 
			Kalaa Mpinga (52)
			Chief Executive Officer
Kalaa Mpinga, who is a citizen of the DRC, has held a number of 
senior positions in different locations around the world. His career has
 included working for Bechtel Corporation in San Francisco and Anglo 
American Corporation of South Africa from 1991. In 1995 he joined the 
New Mining Division, the division responsible for exploration and the 
acquisition of resources in Africa. He was appointed a Director of Anglo
 American Corporation in 1997. Mr Mpinga left the group in December 2001
 to pursue business opportunities in mining, founding Mwana Africa 
Holdings (Pty) Limited, the forerunner of Mwana Africa, in 2003. He is 
also a Non-executive director of Group Five Limited, a South African 
leasing, engineering and construction company.
 
 
			Yim Chiu Kwan (58)
			Finance Director
Mr. Kwan, a chartered accountant, has over 30 years experience in 
finance and commercial roles accumulated from positions in accounting 
firms and private and public corporations. He is currently Chief 
Financial Officer and board director of MBMI Resources Inc., a mining 
company focused on the exploration and development of nickel projects in
 the Philippines that is listed on the TSX-V in Canada.
 
	Non-Executive Directors:
 
 
			Mark Wellesley-Wood (61)
			Non-Executive Chairman
Appointed to Board in September 2013, Mark Wellesley-Wood has over 
40 years experience in both the African mining industry and investment 
banking. Prior to joining Mwana, Mark was a director of Investec 
Investment Banking and Securities in London prior to which he was Head 
of Corporate Finance at Ambrian Partners. He has been closely involved 
in mining activities in Southern Africa, having started his career on 
the Zambian copper-belt and held the positions of Executive Chairman and
 Chief Executive Officer of South African gold miner, DRDGold Limited. 
He has also been the CEO of Metallon Gold (Redwing Mining), which 
operates gold mines in Zimbabwe. Mark is a qualified mining engineer and
 fellow of the Institute of Materials, Minerals and Mining.
 
 
			Ning, Yat Hoi (57)
			Non-Executive Director
Mr Ning Yat Hoi joined the Board in June 2012. He is the Chairman 
of Hoi Mor Industrial (Group) Limited, China International Mining Group 
Corporation, Hong Kong Mining Exchange Company Limited and MBMI 
Resources Inc. Mr Ning also sat as the Vice Chairman of China 
Non-ferrous Metals Council. He has more than 20 years experience in the 
trading, investing and managing of non-ferro and precious metals 
businesses. 
He is the founder of a number of mining companies including Congo 
International Mining Corporation Sprl, African PGM Processing Sprl and 
Fareast Nickel Mining Corporation.
 
 
			Hu, Yuan Ching (39)
			Non-Executive Director
Mr Hu, Yuan Ching joined the Board in July 2012. He was born in 
1974 in Taipei, Taiwan. He studied Architecture and Environment Design, 
graduating from Taiwan Shu Te University in 2000. He also has a 
Fiduciary Broker Licence, a Marketing Immovable Property Licence and is a
 qualified Professional Financial Supervisor. 
Between 2001 and 2006 Mr Hu was General Manager of Taiwan A-Life 
Company, where he was made an Executive Director in 2005 and in 2006 he 
established Taiyou Investment Co Ltd in Hong Kong.
 
 
			Johan Botha (64)
			Non-Executive Director
Johan Botha joined the Board in January 2012. Johan is a South 
African citizen with over 40 years experience in the African mining 
sector, 26 years of which were spent working across AngloGold’s 
portfolio, as well as working as Manager in the Technical Development 
Division. Since leaving Anglo Johan has assisted and managed in the 
development and bringing into production of a number of mines, working 
for BHP and Randgold. In more recent years Johan was the VP for Gold 
Fields Ghana Ltd and then joined Banro to initiate the build of the 
Twangiza mine in the DRC.
 
  
			Stuart Morris (67)
			Non-Executive Director
Stuart Morris was appointed to the Board in December 2005. He 
became a partner of KPMG South Africa in 1976, later becoming Senior 
Partner and a member of the KPMG International executive and board. He 
was Chairman of the South African Institute of Chartered Accountants 
Ethics Committee; President of the Johannesburg Chamber of Commerce and 
Industry; a Public Investment Commissioner; and a Council member of 
Witwatersrand University. From 1999 until 2004, when he retired, Mr 
Morris was Group Financial Director of Nedbank Group Limited. He is 
currently an independent Non-executive Chairman or Director, including 
Chairman of the audit & risk and remuneration committees, of several
 other listed and unlisted entities.
  
  
 
Banro is a Canadian
gold company with production from its first gold project, Twangiza, which is
located in the Democratic
  Republic of the Congo. Banro is also focused
on the development of its second open pit project Namoya and is undertaking 
  
  
exploration on two further fully permitted and licensed projects, Kamituga and
Lugushwa. All Banro's current projects lie along the 210 km long
Twangiza-Namoya gold belt in the South Kivu
and Maniema provinces of the DRC. 
  
 
Banro's Twangiza oxide mine began production in October 2011 and is projected
to produce approximately 100,000 ounces of gold per year with plant
modifications increasing production in 2013 and 2014. Led by a proven
management team with extensive gold and  
  
  
 
 
African experience, Banro's business
model is to focus on the substantial and open pit-able oxide resources it has
delineated to date. Banro has identified 10.18 million ounces of Measured and
Indicated Resources, plus Inferred Resources of 7.01 million ounces along this
highly-prospective gold belt. 
  
 
Corporate profile 
 
  
  
 
AngloGold Ashanti,
one of the world’s foremost gold exploration, mining and marketing companies,
holds a portfolio of operations and projects on four continents, and has a
worldwide exploration programme. We work across the full spectrum of the mining
value chain, and are concerned with the impact of our activities on the diverse
communities and environments in which we operate. 
 
Headquartered in Johannesburg, South Africa, AngloGold Ashanti has 23 operations in 11 countries with
a major development project La Colosa in Colombia. 
 
Our extensive brownfield, greenfield
and marine exploration programmes extend to 12 countries, in both established
and new gold-producing regions through managed and nonmanaged joint ventures,
strategic alliances and wholly owned ground holdings. We have an interest in
Rand Refinery in South Africa,
and own and operate the Queiroz refinery in Brazil.
 
The group is managed according to four
geographic regions, namely: 
·  South Africa,
which comprises two mining areas and associated infrastructure – namely West
Wits and Vaal River, which together comprise six
deep-level mining operations and surface operations. In July 2012, AngloGold Ashanti concluded the acquisition of First
Uranium (Pty) Limited, the owner of Mine Waste Solutions, which operates in the
Vaal River
area of South Africa.
 
  
·  Continental Africa, which comprises
the operations in Ghana, Guinea, Mali,
Namibia, Tanzania and
the DRC.  
  
·  Americas,
comprising operations in Argentina,
Brazil and the USA, as well as projects in Colombia. AngloGold Ashanti concluded the acquisition of the
remaining 50% interest in Serra Grande in Brazil during the year.  
  
·  Australasia, which has two mines in Australia 
  
  
AngloGold enters joint venture to develop Congo gold project 
  
Business Day, 29 march 2010
By BHEKI MPOFU
Photo by americanartmuseum / Flickr
"ANGLOGOLD Ashanti said on Friday that it had entered into a joint 
venture deal to develop the Ashanti Goldfields Kilo (AGK) project in the
 Democratic Republic of Congo with L’Office des Mines d’Or de Kilo-Moto 
(Okimo) as a minority partner.
 
“This agreement allows us to move forward with an enormously 
prospective exploration programme from which we expect to develop 
another world-class gold project,” AngloGold CEO Mark Cutifani said. “It
 also allows us the opportunity to generate prosperity for local 
communities and the country as a whole, which is a critical part of 
creating a sustainable operating model in this region.”
 
AngloGold holds an 86,22% interest in AGK and Okimo holds the 
remaining 13,78%. AngloGold said the agreement provided for the 
exploitation permits to be transferred from Okimo to AGK covering an 
area of approximately 6000km² in the Ituri district in the northeastern 
Congo .
 
This included the Mongbwalu project, where a mineral resource of 
about 3-million ounces had been identified by previous exploration work 
and where further exploration and feasibility studies are taking place.
 
Under the joint-venture agreement, 1,25m was payable by AGK to the 
government of the Congo and about 10,6m was payable to, or on behalf of,
 Okimo as compensation for the loss of rent and payment of surfaces 
rights arrears, AngloGold said.
 
It said that of this amount, about 4,33m was repayable by Okimo to AGK under a loan agreement between the venture and Okimo.
 
“By signing this agreement, the parties responded positively to the 
requirements of the government in relation to the review of the AGK 
mining convention,” Okimo CEO Willy Bafoa Lifeta said.
 
“This agreement also has the advantage to allow Okimo to regain its 
position as a mining operator in the Ituri district by having its own 
infrastructures and mineral deposits outside of the AGK project area.” 
Source:  http://www.businessday.co.za/Articles/Content.aspx?id=104804
  
60 Miners Killed in Congo Shaft
Collapse
http://www.energydigital.com/global_mining/60-miners-killed-in-cong-shaft-collapse
 
7 Aug 2012 Carin Hall
While violent mining protests play out in South Africa, even more miners are
killed in another part of the continent. At least 60 miners died Thursday when
a shaft collapsed in a remote part of northeastern Democratic Republic of
Congo.
 
Local miners had been digging for gold in shafts as deep as 100 meters when
a landslide caused the collapse. Simon Pierre Bolombo, the provincial head of
mines, told Reuters the death toll is at least at 60 people.
   
 A miner in the Democratic Republic of Congo inspects a rock for gold
Current mining codes require that mining shafts be no deeper than 30 meters.
However, hundreds of thousands of Congo workers make a living in the
illegally operated mines, where safety precautions are almost nonexistent. Many
are operated by rebels to help fund their activities, despite international
efforts to deplete the region of “conflict minerals.”
 AngloGold Ashanti and Randgold operate in the
region, rich in tin and gold, but have no correlation to the incident.
"Eastern Congo has been under a near-total de facto ban on mineral
exports from the conflict areas since last April, when the Malaysia Smelting
Corporation decided to stop buying Congolese minerals as it could not guarantee
them to be conflict-free," Laura Seay, a Texas-based academic and leading
voice on conflict minerals, told Australian Mining. "According to the UN,
this ban has reduced the trade in conflict minerals, but we have also seen an
uptick in smuggling and no reduction in violence."
   
Corruption runs deep in gold mines
of Congo
By Mike Pflanz 
  
12:01AM GMT 14 Mar 2007 
  
Sounds of metal against rock echoed up the narrow mine shaft from dozens of
men chipping at the ore face in pitch darkness a mile beneath a low,
palm-covered hill.
 
At the surface, at the mouth of the water-logged passageway, Kakule Ndondo
stood in gumboots, squinting at chunks of quartz he had spent two days
underground hammering from the cave wall.
 
He is looking for gold.
   
With copper, diamonds and coltan - crucial to the manufacture of mobile
phones - the precious metal holds the potential to make the 25-year-old, and
his country, the Democratic Republic of Congo, very rich indeed.
 
Proven mineral reserves are worth an estimated £175 billion over the next 25
years, but so far the bounty has brought only misery and conflict to people
like Mr Ndondo.
 
Corrupt government officials, following the lead of the former dictator
Mobutu Sese Seko, who amassed a personal fortune of £2.5 billion in a 32-year
rule,  have been bought off by multinational firms
who paid huge kickbacks to plunder Congo's loot.
Neighbouring countries  including Rwanda, Uganda
and Zimbabwe have all sent
troops into Congo,
ostensibly to fight political wars,  but happy to
reap rewards from what lay beneath the rich soil.
Now Joseph Kabila, the newly elected president who took office in November,
has promised to clean up his country's mining industry.
   
According to the recommendations of a 2005 parliamentary commission headed
by Christophe Lutundula, a Congolese MP, 16 questionable mining contracts are
up for review.
 
The Lutundula Commission's findings followed a United Nations report in
October 2002 that  identified 114 companies and 54
individuals either in breach of international guidelines on corporate
responsibilities, or who should face global financial sanctions - 16 of the
firms were British.
"None of these recommendations has been implemented, and none of the
contracts has been renegotiated, despite the new government's promises,"
said Sonya Maldar, a policy analyst with the British Roman Catholic development
charity Cafod.
   
"To do so requires a strong level of political will, and there are a
lot of powerful interests who will be reluctant to upset the status quo."
 
Even before Congo's
elections last July, things should have been changing.
 
In  May 2005, Congo signed the Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), a voluntary code of conduct launched
by Tony Blair in 2002 to cut corruption by pressing companies to publicise
their payments to state authorities.
 
In Mongbwalu, Mr Ndondo's home town, close to Congo's border with Uganda,
hopes for a fresh start after five years of war were boosted when  AngloGold Ashanti began prospecting for gold in 2004.
The South African company, part-owned by the British giant Anglo-American,
which has a 41.8 per cent holding, took over a huge concession in the  hills around Mongbwalu which was previously mined by the
state-owned firm, Kimin.
Kimin had  provided jobs for local workers,
supplied the hospital and paid teachers' salaries. Expectations were high that
AngloGold Ashanti would do the same.
 
Yet, three years later, the firm has ducked requests from local civil
society leaders, and Cafod, to publish its government contract and detail
payments to the Congolese state.
 
It pays £850 a month to the local hospital, and £350 to the school, to pay
65 staff, but it is unclear if this will continue.
 
  
 
Our executive team
										
											
  | 
											(as at 1 June 2013) | 
										 
											
     | MR S VENKATAKRISHNAN (VENKAT) 
BCom, ACA (ICAI) 
Chief Executive Officer 
 
Venkat
 was appointed CEO on 8 May 2013, after holding the position of joint 
acting CEO since April. He was previously the Chief Financial Officer at
 Ashanti Goldfields until that company’s merger with AngloGold in May 
2004, creating what is now AngloGold Ashanti. Shortly after the merger 
Venkat became Chief Financial Officer of the combined entity and joined 
the board on 1 August 2005. He is also a member of the Executive, Risk 
and Information Integrity and Investment committees.Venkat has also 
previously been a Director of Corporate Reorganisation Services at 
Deloitte & Touche in London. He has an extensive knowledge of the 
Company and its international portfolio of assets, as well as 
significant financial and capital markets expertise. In his role as CFO 
he has overseen funding for all of AngloGold Ashanti’s operating 
activities, giving him a detailed knowledge of all of our mines and 
operating jurisdictions. He was the executive responsible for 
eliminating a 12Moz hedge book, generating significant value for the 
company, and was the key executive behind rebuilding the balance sheet 
through a series of successful debt financings that introduced long-term
 tenor and more favourable funding terms to the company’s credit 
profile. Venkat is a member of the audit committee of the World Gold 
Council and is on the Financial Reporting Investigation Panel, an 
advisory panel of the JSE. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MR MP O'HARE 
BSc Engineering (Mining) 
Chief Operating Officer - South Africa 
 
Mike
 O’Hare joined Anglo American in 1977, and has held a number of 
positions at various gold mining operations within the group. His roles 
have included General Manager of Kopanang Mine (1998), Great Noligwa 
Mine (2003) Head of Mining and Mineral Resource Management for 
Underground African Mines (2006), Vice President: Technical Support for 
African Mines (2008), Senior Vice President: Operations and Business 
Planning for South Africa Region (2010), and in 2011, was appointed as 
Executive Vice President: South Africa Region. Mike has the leadership 
role as co-Chief Operations Officer in the South African operations with
 responsibility for the three operating regions (West Wits, Vaal River 
and Surface Operations) and continues the accountability for the 
Company’s technology project in South Africa. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MS I BONINELLI  
MA (Psychology), Post Graduate Diploma in Labour Relations 
Executive Vice President – People and Organisational Development 
 
Italia
 Boninelli joined AngloGold Ashanti on 15 October 2010 as Senior Vice 
President: Human Resources, Strategy and Change Management and was 
appointed to the Executive Committee on 1 December 2011 where she is 
responsible for the company’s people strategy, transformation and change
 management initiatives. She is now Executive Vice President: People 
& Organisational Development, with accountability for the company’s 
System for People, Human Resources, corporate services and 
organisational redesign. Italia has more than 25 years’ experience in 
human resources, marketing communications, customer relationship 
management and business transformation, in a variety of industries 
including mining, manufacturing, healthcare and banking. She is a 
registered industrial psychologist with the Health Professions Council 
of South Africa, holds a masters degree in psychology and a postgraduate
 diploma in labour relations. |  
  |  
  |  
     | DR CE CARTER 
BA (Hons), DPhil, EDP 
Executive Vice President – Strategy and Business Development 
 
Charles
 Carter has worked in the mining industry in South Africa and the 
Americas since 1991, in a range of corporate roles with Anglo American 
Corporation, RFC Corporate Finance and AngloGold Ashanti Ltd. In 2012 he
 took on executive responsibility for the company’s business in 
Colombia. Prior to this he was Executive Vice President: Business 
Strategy, responsible for Corporate Strategy and Business Planning, Risk
 Management, Project One implementation and Corporate HR. He now retains
 the role of Executive Vice President: Strategy and Business 
Development, with accountability for the Group’s strategy, business 
development, corporate finance, Investor Relations, communications and 
will also deputize for the CEO in his absence. Charles will continue to 
work closely with Ron Largent on the approach and strategy for the 
company’s activities in Colombia. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MR RN DUFFY 
BCom, MBA 
Chief Financial Officer 
 
Richard
 Duffy was appointed to the board of AngloGold Ashanti on 1 June 2013. 
He has 25 years of global mining industry experience, initially with 
Anglo American, from 1987 and then AngloGold Ashanti, from its inception
 in 1998. At AngloGold Ashanti, he has worked across a number of key 
areas. He was appointed Executive Officer: Business Planning in 2004 
during which time he also deputised for the CFO. From 2004 to 2008, 
Richard was Executive Vice President: Business Development, accountable 
for mergers and acquisition activities as well as greenfields 
exploration. He was appointed as Executive Vice President: Africa in 
June 2008 and Executive Vice President: Continental Africa in February 
2010. He has a Bachelor's Degree in Commerce and a Master’s Degree in 
Business Administration. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MR GJ EHM 
BSc Hons, MAusIMM, MAICD 
Executive Vice President – Planning and Technical 
 
Graham
 Ehm has, since 1979, gained diverse experience in mine operations and 
project management, covering the nickel, phosphate, copper, uranium and 
gold sectors. He was appointed General Manager Sunrise Dam Gold Mine in 
2000, Regional Head: Australia in 2006 and Executive Vice President: 
Australasia in December 2007. He assumed the role of Executive Vice 
President: Tanzania on 1 June 2009 and during August 2010, resumed the 
position of Executive Vice President: Australasia.  He is currently 
working closely with Tony O’Neill as he takes on the role of Executive 
Vice President: Planning and Technical, which includes oversight over 
safety, business planning, asset optimisation, capital investment 
optimisation and monitoring (including projects, studies, and 
exploration), Project ONE, risk management and other technical 
disciplines and related centres of excellence. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MR RW LARGENT 
BSc (Min. Eng), MBA 
Chief Operating Officer - International 
 
Ron
 Largent has over 30 years of experience in the mining industry in both 
domestic and international operations as well as project management. He 
has served on the Board of Directors of the Colorado Mining Association,
 the Nevada Mining Association and the California Mining Association. He
 joined the company in 1994 as Manager of Gold Operations for CC&V. 
He was named Vice President (VP) and General Manager of the Jerritt 
Canyon Joint Venture in 2000 and VP and General Manager of CC&V in 
2002. In January of 2007 he was named VP for the North America Region 
followed by his appointment to the position of Executive Vice President:
 Americas in December of 2007. Ron is now co-Chief Operations Officer, 
adding the Continental African operations to his current Americas 
portfolio, with the addition of the Australian operations once Tropicana
 completes its first gold pour later in the year. Ron leads the team 
aimed at removing $500m from our operating cost base within an 18 month 
period. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MR D NOKO 
MBA; Post Graduate Diploma in Company Direction; Higher National Diploma – Engineering 
Executive Vice President: Sustainability 
 
David
 Noko joined AngloGold Ashanti on 15 June 2012 and assumed 
responsibility for social and sustainable development, global security, 
Infrastructure and development strategies, human rights and public 
affairs. David supports the CEO and COO’s on matters relating to 
AngloGold Ashanti’s involvement in industry institutions in South Africa
 and global institutions relating to sustainable development. Prior to 
joining AngloGold Ashanti, David served as the Managing Director of 
CelaCorp (Pty) Ltd and as the Chief Executive Officer and Managing 
Director of De Beers Consolidated Mines Ltd. He was previously Vice 
President of the Chamber of Mines, South Africa, and is a member of the 
Institute of Directors, among a host of other directorships. His most 
recent position was Deputy Chairman of the Board at Harmony Gold Mining.
 David has strong experience in business leadership and in the 
sustainable development function in other mining organisations and has 
developed his skills across a broad platform of environmental and 
sustainability issues. |  
  |  
  |  
     | MS ME SANZ PEREZ 
BCom LLB, H Dip Tax, Admitted Attorney 
Executive Vice President: Group General Counsel and Company Secretary 
 
Maria
 (Ria) Sanz Perez joined AngloGold Ashanti in June 2011 having worked in
 a number of industries and major corporate organisations. She has held 
legal roles at Investec Bank, Basil Read, Afrox and Sappi. She was also 
Group Head of Sustainability at Sappi. She is responsible for Group 
legal services as well as compliance and was appointed Company Secretary
 in September 2012. Ria’s role is Executive Vice President: Group 
General Counsel and Company Secretary, with accountability for legal 
affairs, compliance, Company Secretarial and integrated reporting. | 
  | 
  | 
  |  
 
     | MS YZ SIMELANE 
BA LLB, FILPA, MAP, EMPM 
Executive Vice President – Stakeholder Relations and Marketing 
 
Yedwa
 Simelane joined AngloGold in November 2000, as Managing Secretary to 
the Board and Executive Committee. Prior to joining AngloGold she was in
 financial services and has experience in the retirement funding 
industry. She was appointed an executive officer in May 2004 and Vice 
President: Government Relations in July 2008. In November 2009, she was 
appointed Senior Vice President: Corporate Affairs responsible for 
Government Relations, Corporate Communications, Marketing and the 
Sustainability Report. Yedwa is now Executive Vice President: 
Stakeholder Relations and Marketing, with accountability for stakeholder
 and government relations, marketing and sustainability reporting. She 
will also support the Chairman and CEO’s offices in relation to 
government relations and the company’s involvement in multilateral 
organisations and the World Gold Council. |  
 
 
  
Randgold Resources
 
Randgold Resources is an African focused gold mining and exploration company with listings on the London Stock Exchange and NASDAQ.  
 Major
 discoveries to date include the 7.5 million ounce Morila deposit in 
southern Mali, the 7 million ounce Yalea deposit and the 5.5 million 
ounce Gounkoto deposit, both in western Mali, the 4 million ounce Tongon
 deposit in the Côte d’Ivoire and the 3 million ounce Massawa deposit in
 eastern Senegal. Randgold financed and built the Morila mine which, 
since October 2000, has produced more than 6 million ounces of gold and 
distributed more than US$2 billion to stakeholders. It also financed and
 built the Loulo operation which started as two open pit mines in 
November 2005. Since then, two underground mines have been developed at 
the Yalea and Gara deposits.  
  
 The 
company’s Tongon mine in Côte d’Ivoire poured its first gold in November
 2010. Randgold’s latest mine, Gounkoto, south of Loulo, delivered first
 ore to the Loulo plant in June 2011 and paid its first dividends to 
shareholders in mid 2012 and the second in November.  
 In
 2009, the company acquired a 45% interest in the Kibali project in the 
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), which stands at 10.9 million ounces 
of mineral reserves and is one of the largest undeveloped gold deposits 
in Africa. Open pit mining has started at Kibali and construction of the
 gold mine has been ramped up for expected fourth quarter 2013 first 
gold production, while underground mine development has also begun. The 
first full year of production is planned for 2014. Randgold also has a 
major project at Massawa in Senegal and an extensive portfolio of 
organic growth prospects, supported by intensive exploration programmes 
in Burkina Faso, Côte d’Ivoire, DRC, Mali and Senegal. A new joint 
venture with Kilo Goldmines Limited has extended Randgold’s footprint in
 the DRC. 
  
  
 
http://www.miningne.ws/2013/02/02/taking-african-gold-mining-to-new-heights/
 Posted on 02 February 2013 
African  gold miner and explorer  Randgold Resources
is a ‘pro’ at developing large-scale gold mines in the remotest African
regions. Its latest project,  Kibali, fits this profile
perfectly, writes  Laura Cornish.
 
Not only is  Randgold Resources capable of finding
large-scale gold deposits in Africa, but has
developed and perfected its skill of converting the properties into profitable
operating gold entities in the face of ‘typical’ African continent challenges.
“No other mining company has achieved the delivery of so many new mines in Africa,” says  Randgold Resources CEO,  Mark
Bristow.
   
 Construction of the Kibali plant
The  Kibali project is the company’s latest venture
(together with  AngloGold Ashanti) and remains on track to
start producing at the end of 2013, and reach full production the year after.
With a 10 Moz mineral reserve (and 18 Moz resource), the project
represents one of the largest undeveloped gold deposits in Africa.
It is set to deliver an average of 600 000 ozpa for the first
11 years with an average grade of 4.2 g/t. The project has a 17-year
lifespan, although ongoing exploration is expected to see this extend
substantially.
 
Situated in the  Democratic
  Republic of the Congo (DRC),
Kibali will include an integrated underground and opencast
mine, a twin-circuit sulphide and oxide plant with a run-of-mine (ROM)
throughput of 6 Mtpa. The project covers an area of 1 836 km² in
the Moto gold fields in the north east of the DRC and is located some
560 km north-east of the city of Kisangani and 150 km west of the
Ugandan border town of Arua.
 
Once in production, the  Kibali project is expected to
contribute about 20% towards  Randgold Resources’ entire
portfolio. This is significant considering it owns just 45% of the project,
with AngloGold owning another 45% and the Congolese parastatal, Sokimo owning
the remaining 10%. “We have a long-term working relationship with  AngloGold
and like sharing the commercial risk. Both companies have very different DNAs
and as such bring different strengths to the venture. Our strength of course
lies specifically in successfully managing technical and political risks,” says
 Bristow.
 
The project’s development is broken down into two phases. The Phase 1
capital programme is estimated at US$920 million (R8.34 billion) (before
escalation provisions and contingencies) and will cover the metallurgical
facility, a hydropower station and back-up thermal power facility, construction
of the tailings storage facility, relocation of villages, opencast mining and
all shared infrastructure. This will run over a two-year period.
 
The Phase 2 capital programme is estimated at US$650 million (before
escalation provisions and contingencies), which will run concurrently with
Phase 1 but will extend over four years, is focused primarily on the
underground development and includes a twin decline and vertical shaft system
as well as three hydropower stations. This is expected to bring the underground
into first production by the end of 2014, with steady state production targeted
for the end of 2015.
 The mine
Randgold Resources is considered an expert in interpreting
and understanding the nature and geology of gold deposits in Africa,
“which are generally high grade ore bodies, with narrow seams,” says  Bristow,
adding that  Kibali is no exception.
 
The project is on track to deliver its first gold from the plant at the end
of 2013 and will ramp up to deliver about 550 000 oz of gold in 2014.
 
The underground mine will be accessed via a twin decline system (men and
material and rock hoisting) as well as a 2.8 Mtpa, 770 m deep,
8 m diameter production vertical shaft. Mining methods will be a
combination of long-hole open stoping, longitudinal (along strike) and
transverse (multiple stope accesses), depending on the height of the stope,
which varies between 25 and 40 m. The mine will employ about 3 500
people once the underground mine is operational and at nameplate capacity, of
which 90% will be Congolese nationals.
 
“The plan is to mine our opencast reserves while simultaneously developing
underground. This will ensure we start generating cash early. Because our
opencast reserves are substantial, there will be an overlap of production from
surface and underground.”
 
On surface,  Kibali will comprise six individual pits, which
will be mined over a 10-year period, with the potential for another two. Even
though underground material is higher in grade, the intention is to convert
more opencast reserves.  Kibali will, however, be a long life
underground mine.
 
“We have already started with additional resource conversion and believe
there is huge upside potential. As such, our exploration strategy is threefold.
We want to extend our current underground ore bodies (by about 1 Moz by
March/April 2013), which appear to continue their down-dip nature; convert some
of our 8 Moz inventory (including near-mine targets) to resource category
and continue with our Greenfields exploration,”  Bristow
outlines.
 The metallurgical plant
Even though  Kibali will be a 6 Mtpa operation,
initially, the process plant’s design capacity is 7.2 Mtpa, accommodating
future possible expansions. All ancillary project infrastructure has been
designed and built to accommodate expansions down the line as well.
 
The plant incorporates a carbon-in-leach circuit stream to process the
oxides and a flotation circuit stream for the sulphides. Upfront commissioning
and early stage production using softer, ‘easier-to- process’ oxide material
will ensure a smooth start-up process, says  Bristow. Both
streams are capable of processing hard ore (sulphide material), because the
surface oxide material will deplete first. The overall plant recovery rate is
expected to be about 87.8%.
 
“This is the first  Randgold operation to incorporate a full
flotation circuit, which is something we are particularly proud of. It shows
our ability to implement appropriate and advanced mining technologies and
improve on previous mine designs.”
 
The company also does not believe in the traditional  EPCM
model. “We have an extensive owners’ team on-site, which works closely with our
appointed engineers and contractors.” There are currently about 5 000
people on-site as construction momentum continues to advance.
 Power
As a strategy to combat the insufficient, erratic and unreliable power
supply in the  DRC,  Randgold Resources is investing
in the construction of four hydropower stations and the upgrade of a fifth, all
based in close proximity to the mine.
 
During the rainy seasons, the  hydropower stations will
provide 47 MW of power to the project, which will drop to 40 MW in
the dry season when diesel-driven thermal power generators will make up the
supply difference.
 
Once completed, the upgraded  Nzoro 1 power station (an
old Belgium
power station) will supply 1 MW of power to the local community. The
combined target output for  Nzoro 2, Azambi,
 Ambarau and  Sessenge equates to 47 MW in
total.
 The community
A critical component of the  Kibali project is the
18 000 strong community, which until recently, was located above the
mine’s resource.
 
“We have had to relocate the entire town, which comprised 14 separate
villages. This involved building new homes, and relocating 3 000 graves,
14 schools, 17 churches, five clinics, an entire catholic church complex,
markets, farms, a nunnery and a monastery. Village relocation may be typical
practice in the mining sector, but rarely on this scale.”
 
To date, a total of 1 407 families (from eight villages) have been
resettled and a total of 1 780 houses completed. 50 000 bricks a day
are being used to build nearly 60 houses a week.
 The current status
The 180 km road linking the mine to the Ugandan border was upgraded,
along with 14 bridges to accommodate the significant levels of traffic required
to transport all equipment items to site. “The mills alone required 57 t
truck payloads. We are clearing up to 200 trucks on the border post every
week.”
 
“Looking forwards, our target for this quarter is to start the pre-sink of
the vertical shaft (construction of the declines has already commenced),”
Bristow continues.
 Kibali has advanced its status from ‘manufacture and
procure’ to ‘erect’. All major items, including the mill shells and gearboxes,
CIL tanks, 70% of structural steel, 13 gensets (of 36) on-site, primary
crushers, secondary crushers, the kiln, interstage screens, overhead cranes,
discharge screens, fuel farm tanks, are already on-site. “We are pouring about
200 m 3 of concrete a day.”
 
The girth gears, elution columns, agitators, remaining gensets, 30% of
piping, apron feeders, hydro equipment turbines, heat exchangers,
electro-winning cells, conveyor idlers, cabling, electrical and instrumentation
equipment and cyclones are all en-route.
 Sidebar: The key to working in Africa
“We have been operating since 1995 in sub-Saharan Africa,
and while every country is different, there are always similarities.. But
governments have grown to recognise us and see the benefits our mines bring to
their countries. It is important to be completely transparent.”
 Sidebar: Contractors
Metallurgical plant/tailings storage facility/hydropower
plants/infrastructure:
- GPS (Group 5 Civils, Protech,
     Safricas)
 
- Group 5 Projects (SA)
 
- Weldcon (from Kenya)
 
- M&T (from DRC and RSA)
 
- DRA Mineral Projects (SA)
 
- Polysius (German)
 
- Traminco (Congolese)
 
- Civicon (Uganda)
 
- Bell (SA)
 
- PMES
 
 
Mining:
- KMS (French)
 
- Shaft Sinkers (SA)
 
- Byrnecut (Australian)
 
 
Relocation assistance programme:
- Kingdom Building Company
     (Congolese)
 
- Optimum Consult (Congolese)
 
- Inter Orientale
     Builders(Congolese)
 
- ADCR (Congolese)
 
- Kibali Construction
     (Congolese)
 
- Chez Bibas (Congolese)
 
- SCBC (Congolese)
 
- MBOSAC (Congolese)
 
- El Shaddai Construction
     (Congolese)
 
- Ethagec SPRL (Congolese)
 
- Algro Consult (Congolese)
 
- Plumbcore (RSA expats)
 
- EFB (Congolese)
 
- Kokwo Construction
     (Congolese)
 
 
Logistics:
- FFK/Tradecorp – Kenya
 
- ETS (Congolese)
 
 
Drilling / exploration:
  
 
 
 
Congo seizes 375 kilos of coltan, Concern At
Escape of Two Convicted Army Officers
Congo seizes 375 kilos of
coltan being smuggled to Rwanda 
 
http://str8talkchronicles.com/?p=39036 
   
By Daily
Economic, September 29, 2013 
 
Customs officers in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have seized 375
kilograms of coltan, a precious mineral used in electronics, en route to Rwanda, an official in Kinshasa said on Saturday. 
 
The seizure was made Thursday at the “Great Barrier” border crossing, said
the minister of mines in North Kivu province,
Jean Ruyange. 
 
Officers stopped a jeep headed towards Gisenyi, across the border in Rwanda, because
their suspicions were raised on seeing that the tires were depressed even
though no cargo was visible. 
 
The following day “they noticed unusual work around the chassis, removed a
metal plate and found a quantity of coltan, around 375
kilos (825 pounds),” Ruyange added. 
 
   
Gold Mining in Mali 
 
  
 
The metallic ore is used in electronic devices such as mobile phones and
laptops. 
 
Ruyange said the driver was taken away for questioning and an investigation
was under way to determine the origin of the ore and whether other shipments
have already crossed the border. 
 
In November 2011, Rwanda
returned to the DR Congo more than 80 tonnes of
cassiterite, coltan and wolframite that had been smuggled out of North Kivu. 
  
  
The top United Nations official in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
(DRC) on Saturdayvoiced deep concern at the escape from prison of two
national army officers who were convicted of gross human rights violations,
including rape and murder. 
 
   
 
A colonel in the Congolese armed forces (FARDC) escaped from Bukavu prison
in the eastern province
 of South Kivu during the
night of 21-22 September, less than two weeks after he was sentenced to life
imprisonment by a military court. 
 
The colonel escaped along with another inmate, an army major, according to a
news release issued by the UN peacekeeping mission in the DRC (MONUSCO). 
 
“I am appealing to the Congolese officials to take the necessary actions to
provide security for the witnesses, lawyers and magistrates who participated in
the trial that led to the conviction of the two fugitives, as well as to open
judiciary investigations with a view to determining the exact circumstances of
the escape and the responsibilities of the suspected accomplices,” said the Secretary-General’s
Special Representative and head of MONUSCO, Martin Kobler. 
 
“I also urge them to take the necessary actions to arrest the escapees,” he
said. 
 
MONUSCO said the escape represents “a step backward” in the fight against
impunity for the perpetrators of gross human rights violations. 
 
It also voiced concern over the faulty security and surveillance system of
the prison, which led to the escape of the two FARDC officers. 
  
 |  
 
 
Giving pea nuts
back to Africans  
 
Economic Development: Growing Together
Mining has a potentially huge contribution to make to sustainable economic development through the creation of jobs and prosperity and the payment of taxes and royalties. 
"We hope that our success will encourage other leading global companies to invest." 
By creating value for stakeholders we benefit as a business and grow 
together with the countries in which we operate. The industry also plays
 an important role in the creation of secondary businesses, the 
development of infrastructure and the transfer of technical skills. 
We believe that less developed countries derive great benefit from 
the presence of responsible, world-class companies and we hope that our 
success will encourage other leading global companies to invest there. 
This section gives a consolidated picture of the economic value 
contributed by Randgold in 2011, including taxes, duties, and dividends 
paid to governments and investment in countries through local community 
budgets, infrastructure and other benefits. It also sets out our current
 approach to engaging with local suppliers and partners for mutual 
economic benefit. 
OUR APPROACH 
Our philosophy of partnership with 
the African countries in which we operate means that all our projects 
are geared towards mutual benefits. As well as driving profits for the 
company and tax revenues for our host countries, Randgold's mining 
projects create a series of local economic benefits including 
employment, revenue for local businesses and funding for community 
development projects. 
Our aim is to build capacity in the countries where we operate, and 
we hope we can play a part in kick-starting national economies using 
mineral wealth. We also understand the risks involved in African 
investments and all our projects are preceded by a qualitative 
assessment combining governance, geological prospectivity, commercial 
infrastructure, environmental and social as well as other potential 
country risks. 
Where possible we work with governments and international agencies 
such as USAID to ensure that as much social tax proceeds as possible 
return to those local communities most affected by our mines.  
"In Mali we have contributed more than US$1 billion dollars to the Treasury through taxes and other payments." 
Our procurement policy is to form mutually beneficial relationships 
with the best localsuppliers. This enables us to build trust on the 
ground and also learn more about the business culture of the countries 
where we are operating. 
OUR PERFORMANCE 
The economic value statement and 
graph below show how our policy of creating value for all stakeholders 
has translated this year into more than US$167 million in taxation and 
dividend payments to host governments (attributable portion), and more 
than US$18.6 million in direct community investment (attributable 
portion). 
The information in the economic value statement below has been 
extracted from the financial statements and underlying accounting 
records, except as stated. However, this non-GAAP information is 
intended to summarise the overall contribution of the group to its 
stakeholders and is not intended to replace or provide an alternative to
 the IFRS financial statements.  
  
In Mali, where our oldest mines exist, we have now contributed more 
than US$1 billion dollars to the Treasury through taxes and other 
payments. In the case of the Morila mine, the State of Mali has received
 almost twice as much as have either of the joint venture partners. 
Wherever possible and feasible, we procure goods and services from 
local suppliers. By doing so, Randgold stimulates the local economy. Our
 main supplier of hydrocarbons in Mali and Côte d'Ivoire is Ben & Co
 Holdings, which has become one of the biggest fuel delivery businesses 
in the region. In 2011, several small and medium size steel and tank 
manufacturers were identified within Côte d'Ivoire and use of these for 
sourcing construction materials is actively pursued. During 2011, Tongon
 spent US$52.4 million or one out of each six dollars of its total costs
 on local suppliers of goods and services. Where local suppliers are not
 able to meet our needs we encourage international service providers to 
partner with leading African companies and pass on their expertise. So 
we invited multinational supply chain managers to work with our 
logistics partners Multilog (formerly Afrilog) to train their employees 
in stock control mechanisms. 
DEVELOPING INFRASTRUCTURE 
As a gold mining 
company, we are frequently the major catalysts behind some vital 
infrastructure projects in the countries where we operate. These include
 power stations, roads, electrical lines, water and sanitation. Improved
 infrastructure provides the necessary foundation to supply our mines as
 well as driving economic growth for local communities. 
Our strategy is to leverage the sustainable development benefits of 
these investments as much as possible. For example, a key focus for 
national energy policy in the DRC is the construction of hydroelectric 
power stations throughout the country. These will increase access to 
sources of energy after years of armed conflict and civil unrest that 
made such access impossible. 
  
We are now investing US$165 million to develop the 20MW Nzoro 
hydropower station adjacent to the Kibali River and other new power 
stations in the wider region. Taken together these developments will 
provide both a sustainable source of power for our mining activities as 
well as helping local agencies to provide a safe and reliable 
electricity supply for the local community.  
"We are frequently the major catalysts behind some vital infrastructure projects in the countries where we operate." 
Forging a pact with communities 
Our mines cannot 
operate without the goodwill of the communities in which they are based.
 Given the frequent lack of development and the complex social and 
political environments in which we operate, community relations are 
probably the single biggest risk factor we face. We strive to both 
minimise negative impacts on communities and to make the most of the 
economic and social benefits that our presence brings. 
OUR APPROACH 
Our policy is to maximise local 
economic development by empowering local communities and to act with the
 highest ethical standards when managing issues such as grievances or 
resettlement requirements.   
We work with communities by supporting and participating in the 
development of elected local community development committees. We 
provide the funding and resourcing for these committees which allocate 
money to community development projects within a strategic framework set
 by our 'sustainable development filter' (see details on page 79). 
Committee budgets are approved at mining company board level and these 
funds are entirely separate from payments to governments, such as the 
'Patent' social tax, resettlement related compensation or medical care 
through our clinics. They are also complemented by charity fundraising 
events initiated by our employees and joint ventures with charitable 
bodies such as the medical charities Doc to Dock and CURE. 
Artisanal and small-scale mining 
As a mining 
company, we are sensitive to the potential for community issues to 
appear due to tension between our operations and artisanal and 
small-scale miners (ASM). To mitigate the business risks from alienating
 the ASM community the company invests in creating alternative available
 livelihood activities such as agriculture. We also seek to build 
effective co-habitation partnerships with legal ASMs based on work close
 to, but not on, our permits. This has been particularly relevant this 
year to the Gounkoto and Kibali areas. Randgold always tries to find 
effective ways to manage the artisanal mining issue in compliance with 
national laws and best practice guidelines such as the IFC Guidelines.  
  
A ROAD MORE TRAVELLED 
The upgrading of roads is a usual consequence of our operati ons 
 and this has been the case in Southern Mali, Western Mali, Northern 
Côte d'Ivoire and the DRC. For example, the network of roads in the 
region surrounding the Kibali project in the DRC is generally poor, 
consisting entirely of unmaintained gravel roads. 
As part of the Kibali project, Randgold has funded and managed the 
upgrade of the main access route between the towns of Doko and Aru on 
the Ugandan border. The Doko-Aru road is particularly significant as it 
links Kibali with international ports. 
A journey that used to take around five days now takes approximately 
four hours. The upgraded road is having a highly positive economic 
impact: it has reduced the cost of transporting food and other 
essentials to the northeastern DRC, halved living costs and increased 
the availability of public transport. The new road ser ves
 as the primary land transport route for equipment and supplies to and 
from the Kibali project. Its upgrade has also benefited the many weekly 
markets located throughout the project area, which have seen a 
considerable rise in the influx and trade of a variety of goods. The 
road is now considered a national public route and the ongoing 
maintenance of the road will largely be the responsibility of the DRC 
government.  
  
WORKING WITH LOCAL COMMUNITIES 
All our community 
activity is carried out with respect for the cultures, customs, values 
and heritage of local communities, including indigenous peoples. At the 
exploration stage, the exploration teams consider social issues in their
 research. 
At the pre-construction/construction stage in our projects we ask the
 communities to select representatives for a local community liaison 
committee (CLC). A public participation process (PPP) is launched and 
the CLC members are also taken on a visit to an operating mine, so they 
get a deep understanding of our proposed project. The CLC assists us 
with local recruitment of construction employees, our communications and
 other actions around our projects. When the project becomes a mine a 
new election is held and the CLC, changes its name and focus to the 
community development committee (CDC). The CDC prioritises community 
development projects and decides how its own budget will be spent. 
Members of a local community committee may include local authority 
leaders, village-level traditional leaders, representatives and 
delegates from women, youth and hunter associations alongside company 
representatives. Our general manager: human capital attends two 
community committee meetings on each mine each year. Our CEO also holds 
mass meetings and takes every opportunity that presents itself to 
interact with communities, to underline our commitment to the local 
community and to hear feedback directly. 
Randgold provides a 'sustainable development filter' to help guide 
the CDC in selecting and prioritising projects. This has the dual 
purpose of bringing projects in line with industry, national and 
international guidelines and focusing them around five main priorities: 
improving basic health, improving basic education, establishing food 
security, improving access to a potable water supply and creating 
non-mining employment opportunities.  
OUR PERFORMANCE 
Our total spend on community 
development and related projects more than tripled this year to a total 
of US$18.6 million (attributable portion). This came from our community 
development budgets, advantageous infrastructural development for the 
community and philanthropy. Some of the many individual projects 
supported by these funds in 2011 include the construction of a school in
 the Massawa area of Senegal, the creation of a market gardening 
programme for women in Côte d'Ivoire and the drilling of water boreholes
 for a number of organisations in Mali. At more mature mines, such as 
Morila, emphasis has shifted towards local economic development schemes 
such as agriculture projects. 
In Sitikily, near the Loulo mine, we have also funded an initiative 
with USAID that enables one of their governance committees to work with 
the local mayor to ensure that as much as possible of the patent tax 
paid by the mine is returned to the local community. 
Ongoing work at all our mines includes analysis on the feasibility of
 agribusiness. In particular we encourage each mine to form alliances 
with agricultural entrepreneurs and businesses to train local farmers to
 produce agricultural products. The local farmers then sell their 
produce to a central co-operative set-up on or close to our mines' 
locations. When set up the owners of the co-operative include the mine, 
the joint venture partners from formal agribusinesses and entrepreneurs.
 The farmers, who supply the agribusiness with produce – such as honey, 
chicken, eggs and vegetables – will inherit the mining company's share 
of the co-operative as part of our closure plan. The agribusiness also 
has the aim of increasing non-mine employment opportunities during the 
operation of the mine.  
POST-CONFLICT REBUILDING IN TONGON 
The Tongon 
mine is located in the north of Côte d'lvoire, 55 kilometres south of 
the border with Mali. It started operations in 2010, coinciding with the
 50th anniversary of Côte d'lvoire's independence. 
Up to 30 000 people live in the eight villages which are directly 
affected by the Tongon mine and since 2008 three representatives from 
each village have joined officers from town councils and others on a 
local committee to manage community development in the area. According 
to director of community action at Tongon Denise N'gom, the creation of 
the community liaison committee in 2008 was an important factor in 
building trust between the local community and the company. Mr N'gom 
said, "At first people in M'bengue and Diawala districts didn't believe 
they'd see any real benefits from the mining project. Now their minds 
are changing. They feel positive towards the mine and they want to work 
together with the company and the committee to build more schools, 
clinics and new farms." 
Côte d'lvoire is still recovering from a full-scale civil war. 
Although most of the fighting ended in 2004 the country has remained 
tense and there were violent skirmishes at the start of 2011 following 
disputed elections. The committee has helped to maintain peaceful and 
constructive community relations at Tongon throughout this transitional 
period and has helped contribute to a brighter future by funding the 
repair of infrastructure damaged during the war including bridges and 
administrative buildings in M'bengue. 
This year the local committee has been responsible for distributing a
 community development budget of around US$160 000 on new projects. 
Projects taken forward by the committee this year include: 
- New classrooms for the Katonon and Kationron communities.
 
- Rehabilitation of the M'bengue secondary school laboratory building.
 
- Contributions towards the M'bengue health clinic, including an electricity generator.
 
- Supplying hand pumps and repairing water pumps in a number of areas.
 
- A market gardening project aimed at women in all the local villages.
 
 
The latter project includes training women and men in farming methods
 and providing them with materials such as seeds and fertiliser to grow 
crops including tomatoes, rice and onions. The project links with our 
larger strategy to ensure a viable agribusiness economy is in place to 
provide non-mine and sustainable employment opportunities during and 
after the life of the mine. A further US$500 000 has been committed by 
Randgold for this project. This sustainable employment creation and food
 security scheme also requires partnering with local entrepreneurs and 
farmers and the initiation of a microlending scheme. 
A lack of jobs for youth is a priority identified by all the villages
 on the committee. It is a problem made worse by high levels of 
illiteracy. The committee has therefore focused a number of projects on 
basic education, including the rebuilt school laboratory and invested in
 new businesses including farmland and chicken farming. A dam has also 
been constructed near the mine which can be used to irrigate the farms 
during the dry season long after the mine has closed.  
  
 "Transparent and two-way consultation is fundamental to our resettlement process." 
GRIEVANCE MECHANISM 
Randgold has a grievance 
procedure in place that all members of the local community can access if
 they believe that they have been unfairly treated or discriminated 
against. The procedure has been set up using guidance laid out by the 
IFC Performance Standards and the Equator Principles. This process aims 
to maintain a peaceful social atmosphere in the case of a non-work 
related disagreement. A total of 395 grievances were registered at our 
five major sites through our grievance mechanism in 2011 (Refer to the 
table below). In total, 97% of these grievances have now been resolved 
with the remaining 11 under review at the time of writing. 
 
Resettlement 
Large areas of land are required to 
manage a successful gold mine and that unfortunately can mean some 
people must be displaced. At Randgold, we are committed to minimising 
involuntary resettlement and, where it does need to take place, to 
ensuring resettled people have their standard of living improved, or at 
least restored. We conduct our resettlement process in full consultation
 with the affected parties and in accordance with legislative 
requirements. We are guided by the IFC's Performance Standards in 
regards to land and resettlement. 
 
OUR APPROACH 
The focus for our resettlement 
process is the 'affected person'. Transparent and two-way consultation 
is fundamental to our resettlement process and a public participation 
process (PPP) is the starting point for all our resettlement activity. 
PPPs use the locally elected community committees as a key mechanism for
 discussing options, alongside radio broadcasts, meetings with tribal 
and religious leaders and open forums attended by the CEO. The results 
of the PPP are incorporated in a RAP which is also put forward for 
further consultation. 
  
Our policies are designed to maintain community structures wherever 
possible and ensure that we compensate fairly in mitigation for any 
adverse effects on the community where they cannot be avoided. On the 
ground in many of the places we work financial compensation is not 
considered best practice. In the vast majority of cases we have a policy
 of a 'like for like' asset replacement. 
 
OUR PERFORMANCE 
In 2011, we spent an attributable
 US$18 million (US$41 million on a 100% basis) on RAP implementation. In
 all cases those people who were relocated moved to an improved 
socio-economic situation, while maintaining their neighbourhood 
relationships in their new homes and farms. 
The Tongon resettlement process began in 2008 and, despite the 
complexities caused by the ongoing legacy of the recent civil war, the 
successful resettlement of more than 400 people, their  
extended families and agricultural land was completed in 2011. 
Relocations were focused around new hamlets located where good farmland 
was available. 
  
The Kibali RAP is the company's biggest to date involving up to 17 
000 people from more than 3 600 households. The two largest villages 
have now been successfully relocated. June 2011 saw the official opening
 of the new Kokiza resettlement, which will include over 4 000 brick 
houses, 20 schools, police stations, clinics, new gardens and several 
churches including a large Roman Catholic Church. 
At Gounkoto, we have completed the resettlement of all affected 
households and all affected farmers have been satisfactorily 
compensated. This includes the resettlement of Faraba village (eight 
households) and the resettlement of the chief of Sansamba and his 
extended family to Sakola, with their full co-operation.   
"We do not see human rights as a passive responsibility, 
we take positive steps to ensure our projects do not infringe on the 
enjoyment of rights in our areas of impact." 
 
Human rights 
If a mining project infringes on 
people's human rights it can face real financial, reputational and in 
some cases legal risks. Our overall objective is to uphold fundamental 
human rights wherever we do business. Operating with respect for human 
rights is a particularly relevant consideration in post-conflict zones, 
such as the DRC and Côte d'Ivoire, where there is a greater exposure to 
human rights risks. 
 
OUR APPROACH 
We recognise our responsibility to 
respect human rights by essentially doing 'no harm' to the individuals 
and groups within the sphere of impact of our mines. We do not see this 
as a passive responsibility, we recognise that it requires us to take 
positive steps to ensure our projects do not infringe on the enjoyment 
of rights in our areas of impact. 
We identify any potential human rights issues at an early stage as 
part of the ESIA that we carry out on all projects. As projects develop 
we then put in place management structures to mitigate those risks.  
It is Randgold's policy not to arm any security forces on our mines. 
Instead, we agree legally binding contracts with the relevant local 
authorities that take into account the Universal Declaration of Human 
Rights and aim to ensure safety and security for any military or 
policing matters. We also include a human rights clause in our 
agreements with all suppliers. This binds them to comply with Randgold's
 ethics and our 'zero tolerance' anti-bribery policy. It also puts a 
legal duty on the supplier to ensure there is no child or forced labour 
within the supply chain. 
However, we recognise that in areas of weak governance, legal 
compliance based approaches cannot always guarantee that companies are 
fulfilling their responsibility to respect the full framework of 
fundamental rights. We therefore also provide relevant staff, including 
security personnel, with appropriate cultural and human rights training 
and guidance and where possible invite relevant agencies of the United 
Nations to conduct training. 
We also work with partners in both the local and international 
community to raise awareness and education levels concerning fundamental
 human rights. 
 
OUR PERFORMANCE 
Although our mines are located in
 relatively stable locations within each country, the fundamental 
protection of human rights for our employees and the communities in 
which we operate remains a challenge. 
The DRC remains an active conflict zone where the Lord's Resistance 
Army and other militia operate and we have therefore fixed detailed and 
binding human rights agreements with the regional governor in the Haute 
Orientele area where the project is situated. 
This year security guards at the Kibali gold project as well as the 
Tongon, Morila and Loulo mines received training from the human rights 
and child protection officers of either MONUC, the United Nations 
Organization Mission in the DRC or ONUCI, the UN operation in Côte 
d'Ivoire.  
  
  
Plans have been prepared for the remainder of the security personnel 
in the group to receive human rights training in 2012. From 2012, human 
rights appreciation training will be incorporated into induction 
training for all employees. 
 
NEXT STEPS 
We are proud of the real partnerships 
we have built up with all our local communities, but we understand that 
our license to operate is not indefinite. It is important that we are 
constantly and consistently active on the ground to ensure that we 
incorporate 
community feedback and expectations into both our 
business planning and day-to-day activities at our mines. This involves 
resolving all outstanding grievances alongside any future ones. 
In the coming year, we face particular challenges with two mines at 
very different stages of their life. As construction at the Kibali site 
continues, the increased building activity makes ongoing communication 
with all local stakeholders vital. At Morila, although we have extended 
its life beyond its original closure date, the mine is winding down 
production and our detailed closure plan, including a strategy for 
agribusiness, needs to be implemented to ensure we reduce the impact of 
mine closure on the local economy. 
 
   
 
We also have planned steps to improve our reporting on issues such as
 human rights and resettlement. In particular, the management of human 
rights is an issue that we expect to attract increasing attention. Our 
policies and operational management of this issue are currently site 
specific and while this has been very effective on the ground, we 
recognise that we need to bolster these efforts. In 2012, we will 
undertake work to establish a more structured company wide human rights 
policy and control system. This will include consideration of extending 
the formal embedding of the Voluntary Principles on Security and Human 
Rights into our security management practices in West Africa and also 
the consideration of the guiding principles on business and human rights
 formulated by the UN Secretary General's Special Representative on 
Business and Human Rights, Professor John Ruggie. |  
Randgold seeks arbitration in Mali tax dispute
August 14 2013 at 03:52pm  
By Reuters
	           
 
 
				  
Reuters. 
A worker wears protective glasses at the Randgold Resources' Tongon mine in northern Ivory Coast in this file picture. 
  
 
Bamako - 
Africa-focused gold miner Randgold Resources is seeking international 
arbitration in a dispute over 23 billion CFA francs ($46.5 million) in 
taxes which Mali says the company owes the West African state, a company
 executive told Reuters.  
  
Mahamadou Samaké, group regional 
manager for West Africa, said Randgold was contesting the bill 
  
“The government is asking us for a tax adjustment of 23 billion CFA francs, which we dispute,” he told Reuters.   
The state had already reduced its 
claim from 43 billion CFA francs in the case, which concerns tax 
payments for 2008 to 2010 on the salaries of foreign employees, he said.  
  
The company has taken the case to 
the International Center for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID). 
There is no deadline for a decision, he said.  
  
“The state should not see this as a hostile act,” Samake said.   
He said the firm's mining convention stipulated that the company would only be liable to taxes included in that agreement.  
  
“The problem is that there are 
taxes which have been created since the signing of the agreement... For 
us, based on our convention, we are not liable for what is being asked 
of us,” he said.   
Mining Minister Amadou Baba Sy 
said Randgold had sought international arbitration after talks at a 
ministerial level had failed.  
  
“Mali has lawyers which are going 
to defend its interests and Randgold also has its advisers... At the end
 of this international arbitration, we will have a verdict.”  
  
Randgold announced a 62 percent 
fall in second-quarter profit last week to $54 million and pledged to 
cut costs, including at its Loulo-Gounkoto mine in Mali.  
  
Samake said the company was seeking to reduce the cost of inputs such as energy but had sought to avoid laying off staff.  
  
Precious
 metals mining companies are under intense pressure to cut costs after a
 20-percent slump in gold this year sent prices to a near 3-year low. - 
Reuters 
Gertler Earns Billions as Mine Deals Fail to Enrich Congo
                    By Franz Wild, Michael J. Kavanagh & Jonathan Ferziger -
                  Dec 6, 2012 1:00 AM GMT+0300              
             
Bloomberg Markets Magazine
 
 
  
 
Simon Dawson/Bloomberg
 
Israeli billionaire Dan Gertler -- a friend of Congo's president -- has 
amassed a fortune via private deals for mining assets in the world's 
most destitute nation. Gertler poses for a photograph in his office at 
the Israel Diamond Exchange in Ramat Gan, Israel, in June.
 
 
Dan Gertler’s bearded face lights up as he looks out the 
helicopter window. Below, an installation twice the size of Monaco rises
 from a clearing in the central African forest, where it transforms ore 
mined from the ochre earth into sheets of copper. 
 
Dec. 6 (Bloomberg) -- 
Israeli investor Dan Gertler, a personal friend of Congo President 
Joseph Kabila, earns billions by secretly buying mining assets at 
bargain prices from the poorest country on earth. Bloomberg's Michael 
Kavanagh, Franz Wild and Jonathan Ferziger report.
     This story is featured in the January issue of Bloomberg Markets 
magazine. (Source: Bloomberg) 
 
Gertler, left, whose love affair 
with Congo began in 1997, when the country was one of the top five 
producers of diamonds in the world, tours a Katanga Mining Ltd. mine 
Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
Gertler, whose grandfather 
co-founded Israel’s diamond exchange in 1947, arrived in Congo in 1997 
seeking rough diamonds. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
Diamonds have been a backdrop to 
Dan Gertler’s life since his childhood in affluent northern Tel Aviv, 
where he had a secular upbringing. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
As a 23-year-old trader Dan 
Gertler struck a deep friendship with Joseph Kabila, who then headed the
 Congolese army and today is the nation’s president. Photographer: 
Naashon Zalk/Bloomberg 
 
Billionaire Dan Gertler speaks 
during a Bloomberg interview at his office in the Israel Diamond 
Exchange in Ramat Gan. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
The open pits of the Mutanda 
copper mine are seen from the air in Katanga province, Democratic 
Republic of Congo. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
The belt of earth that stretches 
from northern Zambia into southern Congo holds one of the world’s 
biggest reserves of copper. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
Billionaire Dan Gertler walks 
through the Katanga Copper Co. mining complex during a tour of 
operations in Kolwezi, Dmocratic Republic of Congo, on Wednesday, Aug. 
1, 2012. Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
Giant mining trucks remove ore 
from an open pit during excavations at a Katanga Mining Ltd. mine. 
Photographer: Simon Dawson/Bloomberg 
 
 
 
“Look at it, look at it,” 
the Israeli billionaire, 38, shouts through the headset above the thrum 
of rotors. “This is what life is all about,” Gertler says as the chopper
 lands in the scorching, dry afternoon heat of the  Democratic Republic of Congo.  
“Everyone comes with dreams and illusions and promises. Everyone wants quick deals. They don’t want to invest. We are real.”  
Wearing a black suit by French fashion house  Zilli, ritual white tassels hanging off both hips and a black-velvet yarmulke, Gertler hops out into the dust of  Mutanda, a mine controlled by his partner,  Glencore International Plc (GLEN), that holds cobalt and some of the highest-grade copper in the world, Bloomberg Markets magazine reports in its January issue. 
 
He climbs into an air-conditioned Toyota Land Cruiser to tour 
the mine, tapping messages into one of his three BlackBerrys, whose 
batteries, like those of smartphones and laptops everywhere, often 
depend on cobalt to keep their charge.  
Gertler has stakes in companies that control 9.6 percent of world cobalt production, based on  U.S. Geological Survey data and company figures. 
 
Diamonds and Gold 
That’s
 just the beginning of Gertler’s influence in Congo, the largest country
 of sub-Saharan Africa, with the world’s richest deposits of cobalt and 
major reserves of copper, diamonds, gold, tin and coltan, an ore 
containing the metal tantalum, which is used in consumer electronics. 
His Gibraltar- registered Fleurette Properties Ltd. owns stakes in 
various Congolese mines through at least 60 holding companies in 
offshore tax havens such as the British Virgin Islands.  
Gertler, 
whose grandfather co-founded Israel’s diamond exchange in 1947, arrived 
in Congo in 1997 seeking rough diamonds. The 23-year-old trader struck a
 deep friendship with  Joseph Kabila, who then headed the Congolese army and today is the nation’s president. Since those early days, Gertler has invested in  iron ore,
 gold, cobalt and copper as well as agriculture, oil and banking. In the
 process, he’s built up a net worth of at least $2.5 billion, according 
to the  Bloomberg Billionaires Index. 
 
Roster of Critics 
He’s
 also acquired a roster of critics. Many of the government’s deals with 
Gertler deprive Congo’s 68 million people of badly needed funds, 
according to the London-based anticorruption group  Global Witness and lawmakers from Congo and the U.K., the country’s second-biggest aid donor after the U.S.  
“Dan
 Gertler is essentially looting Congo at the expense of its people,” 
says Jean Pierre Muteba, the head of a group of nongovernmental 
organizations that monitor the mining sector in Katanga province, where 
most of Congo’s copper is located.  
“He has political connections,
 so state companies sell him mines for low prices and he sells them on 
for huge profits. That’s how he’s become a billionaire.”  
In the 
eight months preceding November 2011 elections, in which Kabila won a 
second five-year term, companies affiliated with Gertler bought shares 
in five mining ventures from three state-owned firms, according to 
minutes of board meetings, company filings and documents published 
later. The state companies didn’t announce the sales. 
 
‘Lies Are Screaming’ 
In
 at least three of the cases, prices paid were below valuations of the 
projects made by analysts at Deutsche Bank AG, London-based  Numis Securities Ltd. and  Oriel Securities Ltd. and Atlanta-based consulting firm  Golder Associates Inc. 
Gertler denies that he purchased companies at below-market rates or that any of his deals have involved kickbacks.  
“The
 lies are screaming to the heavens,” he says in his native Hebrew in a 
June interview, during three days Bloomberg reporters spent with him in 
Congo and Israel.  
He returns from Congo to his home in Bnei Brak,
 an ultra- Orthodox suburb of Tel Aviv, each week to spend the Sabbath 
with his wife, Anat, and their nine children.  
Congo has a history of making deals out of the public view. The  International Monetary Fund
 this month halted a $532 million loan program with the country. The IMF
 said the government didn’t adhere to its demand to publish the full 
details of a 2011 mining deal between a state-owned miner and a company 
that two people familiar with the matter say is affiliated with Gertler.
 
 
Losing Disbursements 
Congo will lose out on three loan 
disbursements worth a total of about $225 million, according to Oscar 
Melhado, the IMF’s resident representative in Congo.  
The 
Washington-based lender already froze payments to Congo in December 
2011, because a lack of transparency made it hard to track whether funds
 from mineral deals were flowing into state coffers, Antoinette Sayeh, 
director of the IMF’s African Department, said in March 2012.  
“Given
 the significance of natural resources in this economy and the huge 
impact that natural resources can have, we think it’s very important to 
help DRC improve in terms of its governance,” she said.  
As the 
country’s mineral wealth is developed, the lot of Congo’s people isn’t 
improving. Congo remains the world’s most- destitute nation, according 
to the  UN Development Programme’s
 measure of health, education and income. Most of the country lives 
without electricity or running water, and one in five children dies 
before his or her fifth birthday. Armed groups continue to destabilize 
the country. 
 
Election Irregularities 
Congo’s per capita 
income of just $280, in 2005 dollars, is below what it was in 1960, when
 the country -- formerly called Zaire -- gained independence from 
Belgium. The  World Bank ranks Congo No. 181 out of 185 in its  Ease of Doing Business Index for 2013, down from No. 180 a year earlier.  
Kabila’s
 re-election was marred by irregularities and violence, according to 
observers from Congo’s Catholic Church and the European Union. Kabila’s 
opponent,  Etienne Tshisekedi, contested the 49 percent-to-32 percent vote, charging it was fraudulent. The Congolese Supreme Court ruled it valid.  
In August, U.S. Senator  Tom Coburn,
 an Oklahoma Republican, wrote to Meg Lundsager, the U.S. representative
 to the IMF, demanding better oversight of the loan program in Congo. 
“Billions of dollars of state assets have been transferred for a 
fraction of their value to nebulous international firms on the IMF’s 
watch,” Coburn wrote in the letter, a copy of which was obtained by  Bloomberg News. The U.S. gave $268.2 million in aid in 2011. 
 
Glencore’s Role 
Lawmakers
 from the U.K. are demanding that aid to Congo be slashed because the 
country can’t show that earnings from its mines are benefiting its 
people.  
Global Witness has called on Glencore and FTSE 100 Index- listed  Eurasian Natural Resources Corp., (ENRC)
 two companies involved in the pre-election deals with Gertler, to 
publish details of the transactions and dispel the anti-corruption 
group’s suspicions that Congolese officials received kickbacks in return
 for selling assets to Gertler.  
“Offering, paying, authorizing, 
soliciting or accepting bribes is unacceptable to Glencore,” company 
spokesman Charles Watenphul said in an e-mail. ENRC declined to comment.
  
Gertler says disclosing the deals to the public is the Congolese
 government’s responsibility, not his. “We’re a private company. Why 
should we announce?” he says.  
“I should get a  Nobel Prize,” adds Gertler, who paces around and waves his arms as his demeanor swings between anger and boyish charm during interviews.  
“They need people like us, who come and put billions in the ground. Without this, the resources are worth nothing.” 
 
‘Braved the Hurricane’ 
The
 government insists it’s following the rules of the IMF agreement, which
 calls for it to disclose deals for its natural resources. And Kabila, 
41, defends Gertler as a man who staked his fortune on Congo at a time 
when the country was wracked by war and in desperate need of cash.  
“The
 truth is, during our very difficult times, there were investors who 
came and left and others who braved the hurricane,” he said of Gertler 
in a brief interview at his riverside palace in December 2011. “He’s one
 of those.”  
The bond between the two men is so strong that Kabila
 at times uses Gertler as a special diplomatic envoy, including in 2002,
 when the Israeli businessman met with then-U.S. National Security 
Adviser  Condoleezza Rice in Washington to ask for help ending Congo’s war with its neighbors. 
 
Secular Upbringing 
Diamonds
 have been a backdrop to Gertler’s life since his childhood in affluent 
northern Tel Aviv, where he had a secular upbringing. His mother ran a 
pop-music radio station, and his father was a goalkeeper for  Maccabi Tel Aviv, a top-division pro soccer team, before becoming a diamond dealer.  
As
 a youth, Gertler got up at 5 a.m. to learn how to polish gems before 
heading to school. He joined his grandfather, Romanian emigre Moshe 
Schnitzer, at business meetings to watch him negotiate diamond deals. 
When Schnitzer died in 2007,  Benjamin Netanyahu, who’s now Israel’s prime minister, gave a eulogy.  
Gertler, sitting below a stained-glass dome at his office in one of the Israel Diamond Exchange’s four towers in  Ramat Gan,
 just east of Tel Aviv, turns wistful when he talks about Schnitzer. He 
recalls a business lesson his grandfather imparted: “He told me: ‘Dan, 
you meet your bankers and you ask for credit only when you don’t need 
it. Just to secure it. Because when you need it, it is too late.’” 
 
‘Guy Has Guts’ 
At
 age 22, Gertler started buying rough diamonds so he could work with 
larger volumes, he says. Gertler flew between war-torn nations such as 
Liberia and Angola and the major diamond centers in the U.S., India and 
Israel, buying and selling gems, he says.  
“From the beginning, he
 went his own way,” says his uncle, Shmuel Schnitzer, 63, who was 
president of the World Federation of Diamond Bourses from 2002 to 
2006.“The guy has guts. This is the basic thing about him.”  
Gertler
 broke with his family’s secular tradition when he and Anat decided to 
adopt an ultra-Orthodox lifestyle. They’ve banned television and 
computers from their five-story, terraced house in Bnei Brak, whose 
crisp stone finishing and verdant shrubbery lining each floor contrast 
with the neighbors’ concrete apartment buildings. 
 
Charitable Giving 
Today, Gertler donates to Jewish charities in Israel, including  Migdal Ohr,
 which runs boarding schools for indigent children and orphans. He also 
helped finance a Jewish bone- marrow registry at the Ezer Mizion medical
 charity in Tel Aviv, which says it’s the largest in the world of its 
kind.  
In Congo, he supports the Chabad-Lubavitch center, which 
provides religious and educational services to Jews throughout Africa. 
Gertler’s family foundation also contributes to charities operating in 
Congo, including health centers and Operation Smile, which performs 
surgery on children born with cleft palates. He has also put $12 million
 into building an agricultural academy on the outskirts of Kinshasa, the
 capital, that co-founder Gil Arbel likens to a “Congolese kibbutz.”  
Gertler’s
 love affair with Congo began in 1997, when the country was one of the 
top five producers of diamonds in the world. In May of that year, 
insurgents led by Laurent Kabila, the father of the current president, 
overthrew the corrupt regime of Mobutu Sese Seko, a U.S. ally who had 
ruled for 32 years. After taking Kinshasa on May 17, Laurent Kabila 
declared himself president and renamed the country Democratic Republic 
of Congo. 
 
Befriending Kabila 
A few days later, Gertler’s
 plane touched down. Shlomo Bentolila, chief rabbi of Kinshasa’s 
Chabad-Lubavitch center, arranged for the young diamond merchant to meet
 Kabila’s son Joseph, the new army chief, at the InterContinental hotel,
 Gertler says.  
The two clicked immediately, Gertler recalls. Both
 carried a heavy responsibility at a young age: Kabila was the commander
 of tens of thousands of troops, and Gertler was trading $2 billion of 
diamonds annually, he says.  
For the next year, they would often 
get together before sunrise at Kabila’s compound. One day, Kabila 
suggested that Gertler meet the president. Laurent needed money to fight
 his war and wanted to offer Gertler a monopoly on Congo’s diamond 
sales, Gertler says. Kabila asked for $20 million in cash, Gertler says.
 Gertler agreed.  
A few days later, he was back in Israel, still 
celebrating the deal, when the Congolese president called. He needed the
 money immediately. 
 
Grandfather’s Teachings 
At 8 a.m., 
Gertler called Union Bank of Israel Ltd., where he successfully put his 
grandfather’s teachings on building bankers’ trust to the test. Using a 
combination of bank credit, inheritance, cash reserves and liquidated 
stocks, Gertler scraped together the payment and sent it to the Swiss 
account of Congo’s central bank, he says. Gertler had bet his fortune on
 a president at war.  
The risks he faced became evident in January
 2001, when a bodyguard shot Laurent Kabila dead and his son took power.
 To Gertler’s surprise, his friend canceled his diamond monopoly and 
never explained why, Gertler says. Rather than hold a grudge or sue, 
Gertler sold diamonds without the monopoly and maintained his ties to 
Kabila, whom he refers to as “my friend Joseph.”  
The young 
president needed friends: When he took over, vast swaths of the country 
were under the control of rebel factions backed by neighboring Uganda 
and Rwanda. 
 
Role as Envoy 
Kabila asked Gertler to help 
woo support from the U.S., which had been suspicious of his father’s 
Marxist pedigree -- Che Guevara fought alongside Laurent in Congo in 
1965 -- to bolster his position as leader and help start peace 
negotiations with his neighbors.  
In April 2002, Gertler says, he 
secretly shuttled between Washington, Kinshasa and Kigali, Rwanda, 
relaying letters between Kabila and Rice. Jendayi Frazer, a former 
special assistant to then-President  George W. Bush,
 says she met with Gertler several times, both with Rice and on her 
behalf. Gertler’s intervention was instrumental to talks that resulted 
in a peace accord, says Frazer, who now teaches international politics 
at  Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh. “He was serious and credible,” Frazer says of Gertler. “He wasn’t just trading on his friendship with Kabila.”  
By
 the time the peace deal was signed between the government and rebel 
factions in 2002, millions of people had died in Congo -- if not from 
bullets or machete blows, then from the breakdown of health services and
 sanitation. 
 
Diamond Sales 
Gertler, meanwhile, won back a
 near monopoly of Congo’s diamond trade. One of his companies, 
Canada-based Emaxon Finance International Inc., paid $15 million in cash
 and loans to the country’s state-owned diamond miner, known as MIBA, 
for a four- year contract to sell 88 percent of its production.  
Congo
 was desperate for investment at the time, Frazer says. “It’s not like 
he crowded out a lot of other investors,” she says. “There weren’t 
many.”  
Kabila, who had formed a government in which former rebel 
chiefs were cabinet ministers as part of the peace deal, tried to 
kick-start Congo’s economy. The ministers signed dozens of deals to 
exploit the country’s natural resources with foreign companies, many of 
them at prices that undervalued the assets, according to reports by the 
World Bank and the Congolese Parliament.  
In 2006, Kabila’s 
People’s Party for Reconstruction and Development, with a platform of 
rebuilding the country’s war- ravaged infrastructure, was elected in 
Congo’s first free elections in four decades, certified by the UN. 
 
Mining Review 
Kabila
 promised to tackle corruption and launched a review of mining 
contracts, observed by several Congolese organizations as well as the 
Atlanta-based  Carter Center, the human rights group founded by former U.S. President  Jimmy Carter.  
The backroom deals continued, says Peter Rosenblum, a professor of law at  Columbia University
 who headed the Carter Center’s mission to observe the mining review. 
“What happened in 2008 and 2009 really proved that the Gertlers of the 
world would win by doing business the way they’d been doing it all 
along,” Rosenblum says. Today,  Transparency International ranks only a dozen countries below Congo in its Corruption Perceptions Index.  
As
 Kabila cemented his hold on power, Gertler expanded beyond diamonds 
into mining of other minerals and metals, forging ventures with 
government firms and foreign partners. Gertler also controls companies 
that won the rights to two oil blocks along the Ugandan border on Lake 
Albert, according to three people familiar with the matter. 
 
Charm and Aggression 
When
 asked whether his companies have stakes in the blocks, Gertler replies,
 “If there is the right opportunity for us to have a big oil play in 
Congo or somewhere else, we will definitely go for it.”  
Six 
mining executives who have done business with Gertler say he mixes charm
 and aggressiveness to make deals. During negotiations, which are often 
in French -- a language Gertler only partially understands -- he will be
 hunched over his BlackBerry, seemingly oblivious to the debate, says 
Pieter Deboutte, the Belgian who runs Gertler’s business in Congo.  
Then,
 suddenly, he’ll catch everyone off guard by interjecting, “Stop, wait a
 bit!” and launch into a list of orders in English to his staff, 
Deboutte says. 
 
Big Profits 
Gertler’s dealings can be 
wildly profitable. In one case, he earned a 500 percent return in just 
six months without risking a single penny as the middleman in a deal for
  Societe Miniere de Kabolela & Kipese SPRL, or SMKK, which owns a copper and cobalt deposit in the heart of Katanga’s richest mining zone.  
In 2009, SMKK was half-owned by the state’s Gecamines, short for  La Generale des Carrieres & des Mines,
 and half-owned by ENRC, the Kazakh-founded mining company that’s listed
 on the London Stock Exchange. ENRC wanted to acquire all of SMKK but 
didn’t exercise its right of first refusal to buy the government’s 
stake, according to the joint-venture agreement.  
Instead, ENRC 
made a deal with a company controlled by Gertler’s family trust -- 
Emerald Star Enterprises Ltd., based in the British Virgin Islands. On 
Dec. 21, 2009, ENRC paid the Gertler firm $25 million for an option to 
buy the remaining 50 percent stake of SMKK, according to filings ENRC 
made with the London Stock Exchange.  
Gertler didn’t even own the asset he was selling the option on -- at least not yet. 
 
‘Maximize Value’ 
In
 February 2010, Gecamines agreed to sell its shares in SMKK to Gertler’s
 Emerald Star for $15 million, according to the sales agreement 
published by the mines ministry.  
Four months later, ENRC 
completed the transaction by buying Gertler’s Emerald Star for $50 
million -- paying a total of $75 million, or five times the price 
Gertler paid for the asset. Gertler says it’s not his fault if the 
government didn’t get a good price for its SMKK holding.  
“That is
 what we know how to do better than anyone else: We know how to maximize
 value for our projects,” he says. “If the government would like to hire
 my services to maximize value for their stake, they should approach me.
 No problem.”  
Gecamines’ current managers declined to comment 
because, they said, they took over the company after the transaction, 
which was detailed in an ENRC earnings report released in May 2010. ENRC
 declined to comment. 
 
Copper’s Attraction 
Copper is what
 attracts most miners to Congo, Gertler says. The metal traded at $7,991
 a ton in London on Dec. 5, more than double its price of $3,190 on Jan.
 5, 2009. The belt of earth that stretches from northern Zambia into 
southern Congo holds one of the world’s biggest reserves of copper.  
About
 37 miles from SMKK, Gertler has a copper and cobalt joint venture with 
ENRC known as Comide SPRL. Touring around the mine, Gertler jumps behind
 the wheel of a small bus. While his associates laugh nervously, Gertler
 almost crashes into two parked helicopters and then speeds around the 
mounds of ore, sending his passengers reeling across their seats.  
“He’s
 like a kid,” Yariv Bahat, Gertler’s exploration manager, yells, sweat 
streaming down his face. Gertler says he hasn’t had a driver’s license 
for years.  
Gertler increased his stake in the mining property in 
2011 -- one of at least six assets the state sold to him that year, 
according to company documents obtained by Bloomberg.  
A company 
based in the British Virgin Islands, Straker International Corp., bought
 state-owned Gecamines’ 25 percent stake in the Comide project in 2011, 
according to Comide board minutes from June 29, 2011. Gertler controls 
Straker, according to two people familiar with the matter. 
 
Unannounced Deal 
The
 full details of the sale weren’t published, in breach of the terms of 
the IMF’s loan agreement with Congo, resulting in the Fund’s decision 
this month to cancel its program with the country, the IMF says. 
Gecamines Chairman Albert Yuma says he wasn’t aware of the sale. Gertler
 refuses to discuss it.  
In another deal, in June 2010 and March 
2011, state-owned miner Societe de Developpement Industriel & Minier
 du Congo, or Sodimico, sold more than 30 mining licenses, including 
those for two copper projects, to Gertler-linked companies based in Hong
 Kong and the British Virgin Islands for a total of $60 million. Numis 
Securities and Oriel Securities estimated the two projects to be worth 
$1.6 billion, though their valuations included ore- processing plants as
 well as the licenses.  
Sodimico didn’t even get to keep all of 
the money it made from Gertler’s companies, Laurent Lambert Tshisola 
Kangoa, its chief executive officer, told Bloomberg News in July 2011. 
He said the mines ministry demanded he give $10 million to the country’s
 general election fund. 
 
‘Not Economic’ 
“It was not an 
economic decision by Sodimico,” he said of the sale. Gertler’s joint 
venture relinquished the rights to the biggest of the mines, Frontier, 
according to the mines ministry. In July 2012, Congo sold ENRC the 
license for Frontier, which in 2009 had been the country’s biggest 
taxpayer, for $101.5 million.  
“When you see similar things with 
slightly different variations happening again and again, you have to 
stop and think, ‘Obviously something is going wrong,’” Daniel Balint- 
Kurti, chief researcher at Congo for Global Witness, told the U.K. 
Parliament’s  International Development Committee in 2011.  
At
 the Mutanda project, too, Gertler paid far less for his 20 percent than
 his partner, Glencore International, paid for similar assets. Gertler’s
 stake came to light only in May 2011 - - months after it was purchased 
-- when Glencore spelled out the mine’s ownership deep in the 1,637-page
 prospectus for its initial share sale. 
 
Stake’s Value 
Glencore’s
 outside consulting firm valued the entire mine at about $3 billion. 
Based on net present value calculations using figures from Glencore’s 
May 2011 prospectus, Gertler’s stake, including royalties and other 
payments, was worth $849 million at the time.  
One of Gertler’s 
British Virgin Islands-based companies bought the stake from Gecamines 
for $120 million in March 2011, according to a copy of the contract 
Gecamines published under pressure from the IMF. About a year later, in 
May 2012, Glencore paid $340 million, plus $140 million in assumed debt,
 for 20 percent of the mine, increasing its holding to 60 percent. 
Gertler says Glencore’s 20 percent purchase was worth more than his 
because it gave them control of the company.  
Glencore CEO Ivan Glasenberg says Gertler has played an important role in Congo. 
 
‘Supportive Shareholder’ 
“His
 involvement has helped to attract much-needed foreign investment to the
 DRC,” Glasenberg says. “He has been a supportive shareholder with us in
 our largest operation in the country, Katanga,” he says, referring to  Katanga Mining Ltd. (KAT), a nearby copper producer that they co-own.  
Surveying
 the land around one of his cobalt mines, Gertler says he will stick by 
Congo. “I took a decision that I wanted to be a long-term player in 
Congo,” he says, adding that his aim is to help develop Congo as well as
 to enrich himself and his family. “At the end of the day, yes, I’m 
looking to create a lot of wealth.”  
Gertler dismisses critics who
 say he’s amassed a fortune at the expense of the world’s poorest 
people. “Our deals and performance speak for themselves,” he says. “And 
whoever doesn’t feel comfortable investing with us will not.”
 
Mining in DRC  
  
The DRC's formal economy is dominated by the
mining sector. Minerals account for the vast majority of exports and represent
the single largest source for foreign direct investment (FDI). Growth slowed in
the second half of 2008 due to renewed strife and the fall in world market
prices. The country is endowed with vast potential natural mineral resources
including cobalt, copper, cadmium, niobium, tantalum, petroleum, industrial and
gem diamonds, gold, silver, zinc, manganese, tin, germanium, uranium, radium,
bauxite, iron ore and coal. The DRC is the world’s largest producer of cobalt
and naturally occurring industrial diamonds accounting for 41.6% and 30.7%
respectively of total global output. It is also the seventh largest producer of
gem diamonds (5.7%) and a major producer of copper (1.5%). Within Africa in 2008 it was the leading producer of tin
(65.4%), is ranked second for copper (23.1%) and tungsten (26%), third for
silver (10.2%) and coltan metals (11.9%), fifth for zinc (3.07%) and equal
sixth for gold (2.18%). In 2007 the DRC was estimated to have over 48% of the
world’s cobalt and about 26% of the industrial diamond reserves. Diamond
production, which is totally artisanal, increased by an estimated 17.4% in
2008. During the same period production of cobalt increased by an estimated
20.8%, copper increased by 54.7% and tin increased by 32.6% whereas silver
output halved. Gem and industrial-grade diamond sales were around US$875
million in 2008 accounting for about 10% of D.R.C.'s export revenue. 
  
Oil & Gas 
DRC is a relatively
small producer of hydrocarbons. As of the beginning of 2009 it was estimated to
have proven reserves of 24.5Mt of crude petroleum and 991.1 million m3 of
natural gas. 
  
 
Key Minerals
The Copperbelt area
 (estimated to contain 55.5m tonnes of copper and 3.6m tonnes of 
cobalt), which runs through Katanga contains 34% of the world’s cobalt 
resources and 10% of the world’s copper resources, and during the 1960s 
and 1970s the DRC was the world’s leading producer of these metals. 
Copper concessions were formerly managed by Générale des Carriers et des Mines (Gécamines), the state owned parastatal mining company. Since the 1990s the facilities of the Gécamines (currently managed by SOFRECO)
 have seriously deteriorated, and production in Katanga stagnated with 
total capacity utilisation estimated at less than 10%, and an alleged 
external debt of US$2.5 billion. However, Katanga is currently 
witnessing something of a renaissance with several industrial mines 
already in production (e.g. Anvil Mining, First Quantum Minerals, Metorex, Forrest, et cetera.) and some massive new plant facilities are in the construction phase (e.g. Katanga Mining, CAMEC, Nikanor’s DCP, Freeport McMoran’s
 famous Tenke Fungurume Mine) Investment is really booming and the 
Cadastre Minier has recorded data for 792 granted concessions in Katanga
 – 70 new ones in the last six months alone, and there are currently 207
 mining companies established in Katanga. However, as noted by the 
recent DfID trade flows study, one of the greatest challenges is the 
endemic corruption, the involvement of the military and local 
authorities in the illegal mineral trade, and the failure to enforce the
 rule of law. There is a general consensus from most agencies that 
around 60% of mineral produce passes through illegal channels, through 
Kasumbalesa on the Zambian border (with small amounts passing westwards 
via Lake Moero). 
Staniferous minerals (Coltan and Cassiterite)
 are widely distributed in the Eastern DRC, particularly throughout the 
Kivus and Maniema. Key mining areas in the Kivus and Maniema include 
Bunia, Kalima, Lugushwa, Masisi, Walikale, Kamituga and Mwenga, with 
most mining rights previously held by the state company Société Minière et Industrielle du Kivu (SOMINKI).
 These minerals occur in streambeds, alluvial deposits and soft rock, 
and are easily extracted by artisanal mining methods. Allegedly 75% of 
coltan within the DRC occurs within and around Kahuzi Biéga National 
Park which has created concerns regarding the destruction of the 
environment and protection of endangered species. 
The Enterprise Minière de Kisenge Manganese
 aims to raise manganese production by 40,000 tonnes per year from the 
Lulua basin in western Katanga. The company already has a stockpile of 
540,000 tonnes of 47-50% manganese carbonate. 
Gold was
 first discovered in north eastern DRC in 1903 and a number of mining 
companies entered the region to exploit its resources. Following 
independence in 1960, the state nationalised many existing companies 
including the Belgian company Société des Mines d’Or de Kilo – Moto (SOKIMO) which became the Office des Mines d’Or de Kilo Moto (OKIMO),
 and around 400 tonnes of gold have been extracted from their 
concessions in Orientale. The three OKIMO concessions in Haut Ulélé and 
Ituri are believed to be particularly mineral rich by many in the 
industry. In the early 1990s OKIMO entered into arrangements with many 
multinational mining companies including AngloGold Ashanti, Mwana Africa and Moto Gold Mines.
 At present gold exploration has been confined to the Kilo-Moto 
Goldfield (Orientale) with the above companies and also the Canadian 
major Barrick, Banro Corporation in the Twangiza Namoya gold belt (Sud Kivu and Maniema) and the South African major Gold Fields Ltd and Cluff Mining in the Kisenge area in Katanga. 
Diamonds
 were first discovered in the DRC in 1907 in the Kasaï region and the 
DRC is currently the third largest exporter by volume with diamonds 
having the highest relative revenue contribution to Congolese mineral 
exports. The DRC is recognised as one of the leading sources of alluvial
 diamonds, principally from Kasaï Occidental, with kimberlite diamonds 
occurring more sporadically in locations within the southwest, northern 
and northeastern areas. The principal areas include Mbuji-Mayi 
(Kasaï-Orientale), Tshikapa (Kasaï Occidental) and Kisangani 
(Orientale). Large deposits are also found in Orientale (Bafwasende and Watsa),
 Équateur (Gbadolite), Kasaï Orientale (Lodja), Bandundu (Tembo), 
Maniema (Puna and Lubutu) and Tselha and Louzi in Lower Congo Bas. One 
of the major players in diamond mining in DRC is La Société Minière de Bakwanga (MIBA)
 an 80% state owned company with a 78,000 km 2 concession area; although
 after production fell 80% in 2006 (2.22 million carats with only four 
shipments and around 6% gem quality) leaving 6,500 employees unpaid MIBA
 has been bankrupt, and Sengamines (previously with Oryx Natural Resources and now Enterprise Minière de Kasaï Orientale (Emikor)) halted production at Tschibue in 2005. Many larger companies are exploring Kasaï Oriental, with First African Diamonds gaining access to the 800 km2 Eminkor concession, BHP Billiton and Southern Era Diamonds have access to a 16,000 km2 concession, and De Beers
 (who held a virtual monopoly on diamond production until 1997) and 
twelve local companies having access to concessions covering 60,000 km2 
Other companies include Alrosa, Pangea DiamondFields, Gee-Ten, and BRC Diamond Corp.
 In 2004 a new polishing plant opened at Kananga (Emaxon Finance 
International and Dan Gertler International (DGI)) and more recently Mwana Africa acquired a 20% stake in MIBA (through Umicore’s subsidiary Sibeka) a company that already owns Gravity Diamonds.
- BHP Billiton
 is investigating a bauxite deposit in the country's southwest Bas-Congo
 province, near the Inga hydropower station on the Congo river with the 
view of opening up a mine and refinery. BHP Billiton already produces 
aluminum at refineries in South Africa and Mozambique, where it secured 
cheap supplies of power from Eskom. The company and the DRC government 
announced in October, 2007 that they are together investing about $8bn 
in a planned hydro power station at Inga and smelter. The DRC government
 was planning the giant Inga 3 power plant on the Congo River to produce
 a maximum of about 4,000 megawatts. BHP Billiton signed an agreement 
with the government to fund the project's feasibility study in exchange 
for up to 2,000 megawatts of its power to keep its smelter running. 
Production would be about 800,000 t of  metal. Timing of first 
production depended on when the power station was built as the building 
of a power plant takes a minimum of five years and an aluminium smelter 
around three years.
 
 
| Year | Production | Unit of Measure | % Change |  
| 2002 | 14600 | Metric tons, cobalt content | NA |  
| 2003 | 14800 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 1.37 % |  
| 2004 | 20200 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 36.49 % |  
| 2005 | 24500 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 21.29 % |  
| 2006 | 27100 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 10.61 % |  
| 2007 | 25400 | Metric tons, cobalt content | -6.27 % |  
| 2008 | 32300 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 27.17 % |  
| 2009 | 35500 | Metric tons, cobalt content | 9.91 % |  
 
 
Source:USGS
 
  
Africa produces
 42% of the world’s cobalt. Cobalt is produced primarily from the 
Zambian/DRC Copperbelt along with copper and as a by-product of the 
Bushveld Platinum mines in South Africa. 
 
Click HERE for an overview
| Year | Production | Unit of Measure | % Change |  
| 2002 | 27500 | Metric tons | NA |  
| 2003 | 30300 | Metric tons | 10.18 % |  
| 2004 | 31800 | Metric tons | 4.95 % |  
| 2005 | 44200 | Metric tons | 38.99 % |  
| 2006 | 83000 | Metric tons | 87.78 % |  
| 2007 | 108000 | Metric tons | 30.12 % |  
| 2008 | 189000 | Metric tons | 75.00 % |  
 
Source:USGS
 
  
 
For over 70 
years, the Katanga Province in the Democratic Republic of Congo has been
 an important producer of copper and cobalt to the world markets. In the
 1980s, the country’s copper output amounted to around seven per cent of
 global production. 
Since the early
 1990s, the unstable social and political environment in the country has
 led to a gradual decline in production. Without ongoing maintenance, 
the condition of most of the facilities has deteriorated and production 
has declined to virtually zero. 
Following 
independence from Belgium, the mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo
 were nationalised in 1967 and became owned by Gécamines (La Générale des Carrières et des Mines),     a state owned mining company. 
 
 
- Eurasian Natural Resources Corporation plc (ENRC) produces
 and processes copper and cobalt ore, and includes a road logistics 
business operating in Central and Southern Africa and a number of 
development projects in coal (Mozambique), bauxite (Mali), platinum 
(Zimbabwe) and fluorspar (South Africa). Boss Mining is
 responsible for the copper and cobalt mining and processing operations 
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, with the state-owned Gécamines as a
 minority (30%) partner. The operations include open cast mines, 
crushing, beneficiation, concentrator plants and an electro-winning 
facility.  Assets also include:SMKK holder
 of exploration permit assets contiguous to the Group’s existing 
operations in the DRC.  ENRC owns 100% of SMKK.In January 2012, ENRC 
agreed to pay $1.25bn to settle a long-running dispute with Canada's First Quantum Minerals
 over assets in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. ENRC sparked 
uproar when it bought the Kolwezi copper mining project in the 
war-ravaged African country. The operation had belonged to First Quantum
 but it had been seized by the DRC government, which accused the 
Canadians of contract violations. City analysts said ENRC's action had 
alienated shareholders and several big investors, including Standard 
Life, sold their holdings in protest. The agreement was struck on the 
basis that First Quantum drops all legal claims against the DRC and 
ENRC; the DRC has also pledged to terminate its claims against First 
Quantum. 
 
 
- Tenke Mining Corporation (Canadian) has completed a feasibility study for the first phase of production at the Tenke Fungurume copper/cobalt project
 in Katanga Province. Facilities have been designed to initially produce
 approximately 115,000 metric tonnes per annum of London Grade A quality
 copper cathode and 8,000 tpa of cobalt in any combination of cobalt 
metal or intermediate cobalt hydroxide. Freeport-McMoran,
 who now controls operations, announced in May 2007, that the mine is to
 start up in October 2008 and would ship copper first. Shipment of 
cobalt hydroxide, an intermediary product, would begin in December 2008.
 Tenkwe is owned 24,75% by Tenke Mining Corp, 57,75% by Freeport through
 Phelps Dodge Corporation ("Phelps Dodge") and 17,5% by Gecamines, the DRC State mining company. Lundin Mining Corporation (LUN.TO, AMEX:LMC)
 and Tenke Mining Corp. announced on 10 April 2007 that they have 
entered into a definitive agreement to combine the two companies to form
 an intermediate base metals company. The 40-year mine plan is based on 
first developing the Kwatebala, Fwaulu and Goma deposits. 
Proven/probable ore reserves developed by Phelps Dodge to U.S. SEC 
standards for these three areas are 103 million metric tonnes, grading 
2,1% copper and 0,3% cobalt (proven 22 million tonnes grading 2,2% 
copper and 0,30% cobalt, probable 81 million tonnes grading 2,1% copper 
and 0,31% cobalt). During 2006, approximately 16,000 meters of drilling 
was performed under the direction of Phelps Dodge for infilling, reserve
 confirmation, step-out exploration and condemnation. During the 2006 
drilling program, mineralization in three new areas just west of 
Kwatebala was discovered (Mwinansefu, Ditoma and Shinkusu). Concession 
exploration for 2007, which includes further resource definition 
drilling at these new areas, is budgeted to accomplish approximately 
45,000 meters of drilling. The intent is to have significant additional 
proven/probable ore reserves defined by the time the initial facilities 
go into operation to support potential expansions in the early years of 
initial operations. In accordance with Canadian National Instrument 
43-101 standards, the Measured and Indicated Resources for the Tenke 
Fungurume concessions are 235 million tonnes of 3,01% copper and 0,31% 
cobalt (Measured 126 million tonnes grading 3,44% copper and 0,33% 
cobalt and Indicated 109 million tonnes grading 2,52% copper and 0,28% 
cobalt), with Inferred resources providing an additional 265 million 
tonnes of 2,6% copper and 0,19% cobalt.
 
 
  
Tenke Fungurume copper-cobalt mineralization 
  
- Nikanor plc, through the company’s joint venture agreement with Gécamines, owns mining permits for three open-pit mines in the DRC: KOV, Tilwezembe and Kananga.
 The company plans to redevelop these mines, bringing Tilwezembe and 
Kananga into production in the second half of 2006 and the second half 
of 2007 respectively, and KOV, the company’s principal asset, by the end
 of 2009. The KOV mine consists of 4
 ore bodies: Kamoto, Oliveira, Virgule, FNSR. It was mined from 1960 to 
2000 and 38 million  tonnes of ore were mined at an average grade of 
5,8% Cu. The resource estimate is 172 million tonnes of ore averaging 
5,1% Cu and 0,5% cobalt; theestimated contained metal at 9 million  tonnes copper, 800,000 tonnes cobalt. Planned estimated mine life is 30 years. The Kolwezi concentrator is currently processing ore from both Kananga and Tilwezembe. Resources
 are estimated for Tilwezembe: 5,7 million tonnes (indicated) at 5% 
copper, 1.0% cobalt, and for Kananga: 6,9 million tonnes (inferred) at 
1% copper, 1,3% cobalt. Drilling to increase resources are taking place.
 Katanga Mining Ltd
 agreed in November, 2007,to buy Nikanor Plc for about $2 billion to 
create the world's largest cobalt producer and save both companies about
 $700 million.
 
 
Katanga Mining Ltd , in a joint venture with the Congolese state-owned mining company, Gécamines, is rehabilitating a major copper-cobalt mine at Kolwezi
 in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Production at the high-grade 
Kamoto Mine will begin in late 2007. Once fully operational, it will 
produce 150,000 tonnes of copper and 5,000 tonnes of cobalt a year at 
one of the world’s lowest operating costs. The Kamoto mine complex was 
one of the most productive parts of its operations. The Kamoto 
underground mine began operation in 1969. It produced an average of 
three million tonnes of ore a year during the 1980s and to date has 
produced 59,3 million tonnes of ore, with an average copper content of 
4,21 per cent and an average cobalt content of 0,37 per cent. The open 
pit mines, Dikuluwe, Mashamba East and Mashamba West (together known as 
DIMA) began operation in 1975, 1984 and 1978 respectively. To date, 57,7
 million tonnes of ore has been produced with an average copper content 
of 4,96 per cent and an average cobalt content of 0,16 per cent. At the 
peak of production in 1986, a total of 5,5 million tonnes was mined from
 these pits. By 1998, due to lack of funds, the pits were allowed to 
flood. No significant production has so far come from the Musonoie-T17 
open pit mine. Central African Mining  & Exploration  Company plc
 obtained a 11,37% shareholding in Katanga Mining which was increased to
 22% by a further purchase of shares on 4 May 2007. Katanga Mining has 
raised $150m towards its project in the Democratic Republic of Congo in a
 transaction that has a ten-year offtake agreement. 
The one-year loan from Glencore is at an interest rate of LIBOR plus 
four percent. Glencore can convert to loan into 9.16 million Katanga 
shares. Katanga has 78 million shares in issue. 
Glencore will buy 100% of Katanga's copper and cobalt output for a decade at market terms. Katanga
 Mining agreed in November, 2007,to buy Nikanor Plc for about $2 
billion. The combined assets will have an annual output of 400,000 
tonnes of refined copper and 40,000 tonnes of cobalt a year by 2011. 
 
- Katanga Mining's DRC/China copper/cobalt conundrum (Source: Mineweb)
 
- Katanga agrees to sell DRC deposits to govt for $825m (Source: Mining Weekly)
 
- DRC/Chinese/Katanga Mining copper/cobalt deal explained (Source: Mineweb)
 
 
Central African Mining  & Exploration  Company plc (CAMEC),
 who owns a copper and cobalt processing facility at Luita, Katanga 
Province, is exploring the C19, C21 concession areas, using existing 
data obtained from Gecamines and Union Miniere, with an indicated total 
resource of 1,5 million tonnes of copper and 500,000 tonnes of cobalt, 
contained in 70 million tonnes of ore. Camec  built up a 22 per cent 
stake in Katanga Mining. It has also secured soft irrevocables for a 
further 54 per cent, including the 24 per cent stake held by George 
Forrest, the largest shareholder in Katanga and one of the powerbrokers 
in the DRC's mining industry. In August, 2007, Camec was about to make 
an £800m offer for Katanga Mining. Organic growth alone will enable 
Camec to produce some 100,000 tonnes of copper and between 6,000-12,000 
tonnes of cobalt by the end of 2008. But by taking over Katanga, the 
company could be producing as much as 250,000 tonnes of copper, 
according to the company. The justice ministry released a statement at 
the end of August, 2007,  detailing the revocation of the licences. It 
said C19 has reverted to state-owned miner Gecamines. Camec withdrew its
 bid for Katanga. 
Camec said in an overview of the company its Luita metallurgical plant 
in DRC would be supplied by concessions C19 and C21 and would produce at
 an annualised rate of 40,000 tonnes of copper and 6,000 tonnes of 
cobalt by March, 2008. However, the licences to these two concessions 
are amongst those revoked by the government. C19 is the most important 
to Camec. CAMEC announced in November, 2007, that it had formed an 
alliance with Prairie International Ltd,
 whose investors include the family of Israel's Dan Gertler, to develop 
the Mukondo deposit and four other areas in Democratic Republic of 
Congo. The joint venture company will own, operate and develop Mukondo 
Mountain as well as the mining concession areas previously known as C17,
 C18, C19 and C21. CAMEC will transfer its 80% stake in BOSS Mining, a 
DRC-registered company, into the joint venture company. BOSS holds half 
of Mukondo Mining and concessions C19 and C21, for which the government 
has revoked the licences. The matter is before the courts in the Congo. 
Central African Mining and Exploration plans to re-start production at 
what it says is the world's largest cobalt deposit Mukondo with its 
joint venture partner Prairie International at the beginning of 2008 to 
supply the market with 6,000 t of cobalt in 2008. The Mukondo deposit 
contains 350,000 t of cobalt, of which 250,000 t would be recovered over
 a period of 15 years. 
 
 
- Anvil Mining Ltd  (AVM.TO, AVLMF.PK) (now Minmetal Resources Ltd)
 has one high-grade copper-silver open pit mine that has been in 
production since 2002, a high grade copper tailings retreatment 
operation that entered production in late 2005, and an advanced 
copper-cobalt project currently under evaluation. The Dikulushi mine, 
Lake Mweru, Katanga Province, has a resource (Dec 2004) of 2,44 million 
tonnes of ore averaging 7,9% copper and 208 g/t silver. Production in 
2005 amounted to 17,816 tonnes copper, 1,7 million ounces silver at an 
operating cash cost of $0.42/lb Cu. The Mutoshi project includes the 
Kulu copper tailings mine and the Mutoshi copper-cobalt mine in the 
Kolwezi region. The estimated resource amounts to 255,000 tonnes of 
contained copper. In 2005,16,500 tonnes of copper were recovered. At the
 Kinsevere, Tshifufia, Tshifufiamashi projects, 50 km north of 
Lubumbashi, estimated resources are 1,582,000 tonnes of contained copper
 from ore averaging 3,8% copper. The company is also exploring prospects
 at Lungeshi and Kapulo. Anvil Mining forecast a 10 percent increase in 
2008 copper production but a big drop for silver on Wednesday, as it 
announced record 2007 production from its three mines in the Democratic 
Republic of Congo. The Toronto-listed miner expects to produce more than
 55,000 tonnes of copper and 1.3 million oz of silver in 2008. That 
compares with 47,633 tonnes of copper and 2.45 million oz of silver in 
2007. Anvil operates and has majority stakes in the Dikulushi 
copper-silver mine, Kinsevere copper mine, and Kulu copper tailings 
operation.
 
 
 
  
Chalcopyrite ore at Kinsevere 
Mining begins at Kinsevere pit 
- International                            Barytex Resources Ltd (Canadian)                            holds an option to earn a 65% interest in the                            Shituru high grade copper-cobalt deposit located at                            Likasi,
 Democratic Republic of the Congo. The Shituru deposit is expected to 
support a high grade open pit mine with low operating cost and has 
untested underground potential. Barytex has an option to acquire up to 
an 86,67% interest in stages in East China Capital Investments Ltd. 
(ECCI) whose sole asset is an option to acquire a 75% share interest in 
the Shituru Copper-Cobalt deposit from Generale Des Carrieres et des 
Mines ("Gecamines"). When fully exercised the interests in the Shituru 
Property will be indirectly held as follows: 65% by Barytex, 25%, by 
Gecamines and 10% by the Optionors, Ever Noble Group Ltd. and Megatrend 
International Holdings Ltd (ENG-MIH). The zone of mineralization is 
approximately 800 m in strike length with widths of 17 meters for each 
of the zones exposed at surface.
 
 
- Mwana Africa plc purchased Anmercosa Exploration (Congo) s.p.r.l. from Anglo American plc
 in early 2004. Anmercosa has mining exploration rights over 
approximately 10,000 square kilometres in the Katanga copper belt, which
 has showings of copper, zinc, cobalt and gold. As part of the purchase 
arrangements, Mwana Africa entered into a joint venture with Anglo 
American in respect of these mining exploration rights. Under the joint 
venture, Anmercosa is responsible for all feasibility study and other 
costs, and Anglo American has a carried interest in the joint venture. 
Anglo American may increase its stake in the joint venture if particular
 metal or mineral concentration is discovered, and will fund those 
discoveries to bankable feasibility study. Mwana Africa is also 
currently in negotiations with Gecamines, the DRC state copper mining 
company, relating to a previously worked copper/cobalt mine near 
Anmercosa’s exploration ground in Katanga. Production of copper/cobalt 
could begin soon after the finalisation of the agreement with Gecamines.
 
 
- Africo Resources Ltd (Canadian, ARL.TO)
 is developing the Kalukundi Project located within the Kolwezi District
 of Katanga Province in the south-east of the DRC. The Kalukundi deposit
 has been defined through the evaluation of 4 fragments of Mines series 
rocks. An ore reserve of oxide materials has been defined within these 4
 fragments of 7,8 million tonnes grading 2,44% Cu and 0,69% Co. The 
economics of the deposit are based on a production rate of 800,000 
tonnes per year for nominal annual production of 16,400 tonnes per year 
copper and 3,800 tonnes per year cobalt.
 
 
- Metorex
 reached an agreement with the Government of the DRC, La Generale et des
 Mines [“Gecamines”], and Sentinelle Global Investments (Pty) Ltd 
[“Sentinelle”] to mine and treat the high grade copper/cobalt orebody at
 Ruashi, and the Ruashi and Etoile stockpiles situated in the Katanga 
Province of the DRC in May 2004. Probable mineral reserves are 
24,120,000 at a grade of 3,78% Cu and 0,79% Co. Planned eventual 
production is 45,000 tonnes of copper and 3,500 tonnes of cobalt per 
annum. Metorex increased its effective interest in the two-phase Ruashi 
project to 80% from 67.2% by buying out the private Sentinelle for R60m 
in cash and the issue of 12.5m shares at R21.35 each in March, 2007. 
State-owned Gecamines owns the other 20% of Ruashi. The company 
announced in July, 2007, that it had acquired 38.7% of Copper Resources Corporation (CRC)
 and a 5% stake in Miniere De Musoshi Et Kinsenda Sarl (MMK), a 75% 
owned subsidiary of CRC, for £42.85m, about R600m. Metorex said on 18 
January, 2008, that it had unconditionally contracted to acquire a 
further 6,6% of Copper Resources Corporation, lifting its total holding 
to 45,6% of the firm. CRC holds a 75% interest in MMK which owns the 
Kinsenda, Musoshi and Lubembe copper deposits as well as various 
exploration permits in the southern portion of the Katanga Province of 
the DRC. Metorex is also drilling the Musonoi copper deposit, close to 
the two deposits the group is mining at Kolwezi.
 
 
 
Copper Resources Corporation
 (AIM:CRC) has three projects that include the Kinsenda copper restart 
project; completing a feasibility study at Musoshi, an underground 
copper mine, and starting exploration at Lubembe, an advanced copper 
exploration project. It has raised £56.3 million, by placing 45 million 
new common shares with Glencore International AG
 at 125 pence per share, which it said was enough to develop its three 
projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Glencore's stake currently
 represents 35.7% of the enlarged share capital of Copper Resources, 
which presently stands at 126,065,064 common shares in issue. On 
November 5, 2007, Metorex
 offered 73  of its shares for every 100 Copper Resources' shares with 
cash alternative, overvaluing the company's stock at £1.49 per share, 
with its CEO Charles Needham saying this would provide the company's 
shareholders with an exposure "to Metorex's established projects in the 
DRC and a diversified mineral portfolio". It was announced on the 20 
November, 2007, that CRC will revoke the issue of 45 million shares to 
Glencore as Metorex prepared to issue documents to minority shareholders
 and made plans around CRC’s assets in the Congo. 
The board of AIM-traded CRC decided the independent directors Sam Jonah 
and Mitchell Alland –both of whom subsequently resigned their positions –
 had acted outside their mandate by offering the shares to the 
Swiss-based commodity trader. 
The motivation for the placing of shares with Glencore is not 
understood. It would have given Glencore a 36% stake in CRC just as 
Metorex launched its offer to mop up minorities' shares. 
 
 
- First Quantum Minerals Ltd acquired 100% of Adastra. Adastra was a listed international mining company with its principal asset being the Kolwezi Copper-Cobalt Tailings Project
 in the DRC. Due to the poor recoveries obtained from the conventional 
concentrating techniques used, valuable amounts of copper and cobalt 
were discharged into two tailings dams known as Kingamyambo and Musonoi.
 The two dams contain 112,8 million t of oxide tailings grading a 
remarkable 1,49 % copper and 0,32 % cobalt. The company is considering 
the construction of an initial 35,000 tonne per year copper facility and
 5,800 tonne per year cobalt facility which would be designed to be 
expanded to 105,000 tonnes of copper per year and 17,400 tonnes of 
cobalt per year.
 
 
  
The huge Kingamyambo tailings dam (above) is a smaller resource than the Musonoi tailings dam. 
Source: Adastra 
First Quantum is also developing the Frontier deposit, near the town of Sakania in the DRC, within 2 km of the Zambian border. The estimated resource is 161 million tonnes grading 1.17% copper (0.5% Cu cut-off) or 1.9 million tonnes of copper.
 
Frontier Copper Mine 
 
 
- Ivanhoe Nickel and Platinum Ltd. (Ivanplats), controlled by Robert Friedland of Ivanhoe Mines,
 has rights to about 20,000 square kilometres and, besides the copper 
and cobalt at the Kalongwe copper-cobalt project 10 kilometres north of 
Tenke Fugurume, also plans to develop the Kengere project, near the town
 of Kolwezi, which holds zinc, lead, silver and germanium. Investment 
banking sources expect an initial public offering of Ivanplats shares in
 2007 with a dual listing on the Toronto Stock Exchange and in London.  Ivanplat's
 95%-owned Kamoa property hosts a large stratiform copper deposit on the
 Central African Copper belt in the Democratic Republic of Congo's (DRC)
 Katanga province. Sitting roughly 270 km west of the provincial 
capital, Lubumashi, Kamoa represents one of the more promising 
undeveloped copper deposits worldwide in terms of tonnage and grade. The
 company has delineated 348 indicated tonnes grading 2.64% Cu — 
representing roughly 9.2 million contained tonnes — in addition to 462 
million inferred tonnes averaging 2.72% Cu. The resources are defined 
over a 20-km-by-15-km wide zone contained primarily within an area where
 Ivanplats has acquired its exploitation licenses, which were granted in
 late August and carry a 30-year term. The company has agreed to sell an
 additional 15% of the project to the DRC government, which will bump 
domestic ownership to 20%. Ivanplats completed a preliminary economic 
assessment (PEA) on Kamoa that modelled a US$2 billion mine with a 
61-year life. The operation would run at an average throughput rate of 5
 million tonnes per year, and produce roughly 143,000 tonnes of copper 
annually over the first 10 years at cash costs totalling $1.19 per 
lb. At a $3.50 per lb copper price, the PEA returns a $2 billion after 
tax net present value and 21.5% internal rate of return, assuming a 10% 
discount rate. The company intends to spend roughly US$70 million over 
the next two years at Kamoa on drilling and modelling work.
 
 
- TEAL Exploration & Mining Incorporated (Canadian, TSX:TL; JSE:TEL)
 is exploring the Kalumines Copper-Cobalt Project, a joint venture with 
La Générale des Carrières et des Mines ("Gécamines"), which comprises 
approximately 77 square kilometres. The project area hosts four near 
surface areas of copper mineralization that the Company believes may be 
exploitable using open-pit mining techniques. Drilling, trenching and 
pitting were undertaken by previous owners and copper and cobalt 
mineralization was identified over a strike length in excess of 3 
kilometres. The Company has agreed with Gécamines to conduct a drilling 
program to define the resource and to complete a feasibility study on 
the project by May 2007. TEAL announced in November, 2007, that its 
planned mining rate at the Lupoto Copper Project, which forms part of 
the Kalumines property was achieved in September, 2007. TEAL could also 
begin producing 12,000 tonnes of copper in early 2008 at the company's 
70-percent owned Mwambashi copper project. TEAL Exploration & Mining
 said in February, 2008, that it had discovered copper and cobalt 
mineralisation in the Karu East block some 5 km SSE of the Lupoto Copper
 Project in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Some of the drilling
 highlights include: 21 metres grading 2.57% copper; 39 metres grading 
3.25% copper, including 15 metres at 0.46% cobalt; and 16 metres grading
 0.33% cobalt, it said.
 
 
 
- El Nino Ventures Inc  (Canadian, ELNOF.OB, ELN.V) announced
 in May, 2007, that it had acquired a 70 percent interest in a Joint 
Venture Agreement with GCP Group Ltd, a private Congolese company. El 
Nino holds it's initial 70 percent interest in Research Permits No. 
5214, 5215, 5216 and 5217. These permits were granted by the Cadastre 
Miner of the DRC and cover 352 square kilometers in the DRC-Zambian 
Copperbelt. The permits are located between Lubumbashi and Likasi.
 
 
Gecamines will
 contribute 10 million metric tonnes of copper deposits to a $6bn joint 
venture with two Chinese companies. he company will also contribute half
 a million tonnes of cobalt to a partnership that has been agreed with Sinohydro Corporation and China Railway Engineering Corporation.
 The two Chinese entities will own a 68% stake in the venture. Under the
 deal deal signed in January, 2008, by China's Exim Bank and the 
Kinshasa government, Congolese state miner Gecamines, China's Sinohydro 
Corp and China Railway Engineering Corp will create a joint mining 
venture with rights to two mining concessions. 
Together the Mashamba and Dikuluwe mines contain 10 million tonnes of copper and 2 million tonnes of cobalt, he said. 
The Chinese investment would be repaid with revenues from the joint venture, called Sicomines. 
 
- Katanga Mining's DRC/China copper/cobalt conundrum (Source: Mineweb)
 
 
  
  
The Congo (DRC)
 is presumed to be Africa's largest diamond producer, but production 
figures are not available. Most of the DRC's production is produced by 
the informal sector. In mid-2004 the Kimberley Process struck the 
country off its list of certifiable diamond producers accusing it of 
dealing in blood diamonds which resulted in the DRC ceasing exports of 
diamonds. It is estimated that roughly a third of the DRC's production 
is smuggled out of the country every year. 
 
- Artisianal mining
 of placer diamond deposits in the DRC takes place along the Bushimaïe 
and Lubilash tributaries to the Sankuru River near the town of 
Mbuji-Maye (formerly Bakwanga) in the Kasaï-Oriental province of 
souther-central DRC, and along the Tshikapa River in the 
Kasaï-Occidental province.
 
 
 
- Société Minière de Bakwanga (MIBA), which is a joint venture between Belgian company Sibeka (20%) and the DRC government (80%), owns the only functioning mine in the country, Mbuji Mayi. The shareholders of Sibeka were Umicore, 80% and  De Beers, 20%.  In May 2006 Mwana Africa plc
 acquired Umicore’s subsidiary, Sibeka. Over the past five years MIBA 
has produced an average of 6 million carats of diamonds per year. It has
 mining and exploration titles covering an area in excess of 45,000 km2 
where it is discussing joint ventures with major diamond producers.
 
 
- De Beers signed a confdentiality report with Oryx Natural Resources as part of a due diligence exercise for the possible development of the Sengamines diamond concession in 2004.
 
 
-  BRC Diamond Corporation (Canadian and in which gold junior Banro
 holds a 27,5% stake) controls 5,426 square kilometres and retains a 
further 11,100 square kilometres through option agreements on ground 
that historically has been the largest diamond producing region of the 
DRC. The 
geology of the region represents an extension of the Angola Craton, 
which underlies the diamond fields of Lunda Norte Province, in northeast
 Angola. The company is involved in early stage exploration of both 
the kimberlite and alluvial potential of the area. By the end of 2007, 
BRC proposed merging and acquiring all of the outstanding shares of Diamond Core
 , the South African diamond exploration company, in exchange for BRC 
shares. BRC  had been awarded a further 58 diamond exploration permits 
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, the firm said in December, 2007. 
The Toronto-based company now holds directly, or controls through option
 agreements, a total of 116 exploration permits, covering an area of 38 
140,5 km² in the provinces of East and West Kasai and Bandudu in the 
south, Equateur and Oriental in the north, and Maniema in the 
central-east of the DRC.
 
 
 
- SouthernEra has secured 56 exclusive diamond exploration permits
 covering more than 16,000 square km in the diamond-rich Kasaï 
Provinces. This area is producing up to 20 million carats of diamonds 
per year. In a joint venture formed in October 2005 with BHP Billiton on
 39 of SouthernEra’s 56 permits, exploration has commenced for primary 
diamond deposits. In May 2006, SouthernEra signed an agreement with Nyumba Ya Akiba SPRL,
 a local Congolese company, acquiring an immediate 74% undivided 
interest in eight exploration permits covering 2,744 km2 of diamond 
prospective ground in the Kabinda area of the Kasai Oriental Province. 
SouthernEra has also secured alluvial diamond permits within the Tshikapa / Kasai / Luebo
 alluvial diamond field in the Kasaï-Occidental Province, and also 
within a second major alluvial diamond field in the Kasaï-Oriental 
Province. SouthernEra controls a 34 kilometre stretch of Kasai River and
 2 kilometres of the Tshikapa River within this diamond producing area 
of southwestern DRC. SouthernEra owns a 100% interest in four permits 
covering 80,35 km2 and a 70 percent interest in a further four permits 
covering 77,73 km2.
 
 
- Gem Diamonds
 holds various concessions in the Mbelenge, Lubembe, Longatshimo and 
Tshikapa areas in the Kasai Occidental Province, and the Mbelenge area 
to the north of this. The Mbelenge project comprises four concessions, 
each with mining permits, along the Kasai River from the port of Djoku 
Punda, south for approximately 20km. The Lubembe project comprises 22 
concessions on the Tshiumbe and Lubembe Rivers. The area was previously 
prospected in some detail with small alluvial mines established. Lubembe
 is considered to have significant kimberlite potential with 17 targets 
identified in a limited survey in 2005. The Longatshimo project 
comprises 12 concessions on or around the Longatshimo River, with a 
combination of mining and reconnaissance permits. The Tshikapa project 
hosts two concessions on the bank of the Tshikapa River each with mining
 permits.
 
 
- African Diamonds plc (AFCDF.PK,
 also active in Botswana, Guinea, Sierra Leone), the AIM and 
Botswana-listed diamond explorer, has acquired a 35,42 percent share in Bugeco S.A.,
 a private Belgian company and with it, the right to appoint a director.
 The total consideration paid was $1,616,420 in cash. The key asset of 
Bugeco is a joint venture with De Beers on 21 licences in the Democratic
 Republic of the Congo (DRC), covering 807 000 hectares of prospective 
diamondiferous ground. Initial exploration has discovered several new 
kimberlites, in an area where alluvial diamonds are already in evidence.
 Analysis indicates the presence of microdiamonds in several of the 
newly discovered kimberlites, n what appears to be two new kimberlite 
clusters. Reconnaissance magnetic and detailed airborne magnetic (DAF) 
geophysical surveys have been completed over the entire licence area and
 ground magnetic, gravity and electromagnetic surveys over specific 
anomalies have resulted in the identification of new drill targets. 
Extensive ground sampling using helicopter and vehicle access is 
ongoing. The 2007 work programme will focus on further discovery 
drilling and delineation. This work will prioritise bulk sampling.
 
 
- Pangea Diamond Fields plc
 is exploring the the Yusufu and Ikulu alluvial projects on the 
Longatshimo River, and intends bulk sampling the properties. A plant 
site has been identified and an operational team is in the process of 
being assembled. The required plant has been designed and is currently 
being manufactured, with operations expected to commence mid 2007.  It 
was reported in January, 2008, that a bulk sampling plant had arrived at
 Pangea Diamondfield's Longatshimo River project and plant construction 
was in progress.
 
 
 
- Mwana Afica plc  bought Australian firm, Gravity Diamonds, which has been exploring rights held by BHP Billiton in the Kasai Crater region, in November 2006, for $34m , and announced on March 16, 2007,  a C$69.7 m  share offer for SouthernEra which has adjacent properties.
 
 
- Lindian Resources Ltd
 is exploring the Tshikapa diamond field, in the West Kasai region of 
the DRC. The area is about 600 km east-southeast of Kinshasa, the 
capital of DRC. The Tshikapa Diamond Project consists of four licence 
areas covering about 800 sq km.
 
 
 
Historical background (1904-2012) 
The rise of gold-mining related abuses 
The
 earliest exploration for gold deposits in the DRC began in 1904, 
shortly after two Australian explorers working for the administration of
 King Leopold II discovered alluvial gold along the Angola River. The 
discoverers, Hannam and O’Brien, quickly recruited local workers to 
start exploiting this rich resource. Long before they found gold, King 
Leopold had issued decrees designed to maximise the exploitation of the 
Congo’s many natural resources. According to these decrees, each village
 chief would be subject to ‘prestations’ – a system that forced them to 
assist in the requisition of workers and porters, food, and construction
 material. The decrees also established the Force Publique, the police 
and security units composed of locals and led by European mercenaries, 
which enforced the King’s will by wielding the chicotte, burning 
villages, and torturing, flogging and raping villagers. 
By
 August 1906, Hannam and O’Brien reported a monthly output of 600 ounces
 of gold and they shipped the first consignment of gold to Brussels. 
Other gold veins were subsequently discovered in parts of eastern Congo,
 increasing the pressure to coerce locals into mining. During the First 
World War, the lives of the people of eastern Congo became even more 
difficult. The Belgian colonial authority forcibly recruited Congolese 
into the Force Publique to fight against the forces of German East 
Africa. To support the Belgian Congo’s military adventure, Congolese 
were forced to work as porters or to grow food for the soldiers. The 
colony could afford the military effort because of the ‘voluntary’ 
payment of taxes, and the Congolese Central Bank’s increasing intake of 
Ituri gold. Meanwhile, the Germans exploited the Sekenke Mine in 
Tanzania in order to finance their war effort. 
Little
 is known about the situation of Congolese gold miners after the First 
World War because international attention on the abuses perpetrated in 
the Congo subsided considerably once Leopold II was forced to cede 
control of the country to the Belgian government. Internal reporting by 
the colonial administrators provides some glimpses into the continuing 
abuses – including in the copper mines of Katanga, which were by far the
 most important sector of the mining industry – and reflect scandalously
 high mortality rates. David Northrup, who has researched the labour 
situation in the Congo extensively, concluded that the method of abuse 
changed over time but not the actual abuse: “expanding demands for 
labour brought many more people under some sort of coerced labour 
system. Thus, for the affected Africans, slavery had changed its form 
more than its character.” 
After
 the Congo gained independence in 1960, looting Congo’s gold became the 
pastime of the leaders of the government military and rebel groups. The 
Simba insurrection led by Christophe Gbenye took much of north-eastern 
Congo and established the ‘People’s Republic of the Congo’, making 
Kisangani (Stanleyville) the new capital. Gbenye occupied and looted the
 Moto mines around Watsa. According to Time magazine, he stole 1500 
pounds of gold from the safe of the mining operations. 
When
 Joseph Mobutu seized power at the end of 1965, he consolidated the 
gold-mining operations of the eastern Congo under SOKIMO (or OKIMO) in 
which he integrated the industrial production of the Kilo and Moto gold 
mines. SOKIMO was soon known to be Mobutu’s personal piggy bank. 
Mismanagement
 led to the gradual dismantling of the industrial structures, and by the
 late 1980s OKIMO generated revenue only by taxing informal, artisanal 
and small-scale miners. The economic collapse was made worse by the 
First Congo War. Once Laurent-Désiré Kabila assumed leadership of the 
Alliance des Forces Démocratiques pour la Libération du Congo-Zaïre 
(AFDL) and launched an armed revolt with his allies Presidents Paul 
Kagame (Rwanda) and Yoweri Museveni (Uganda), he systematically occupied
 and exploited the gold-rich mining areas. Long before he had deposed 
Mobutu and taken full control of the country, he started to sell gold 
concessions to the highest bidders. 
A
 new wave of violence, coerced labour and economic disruption crashed 
over the artisanal and small-scale miners with the Second Congo War. The
 occupying forces of Uganda and Rwanda raided the gold-mining centres of
 the east, followed by waves of Congolese militia groups. RCD-Goma, 
RCD-K-ML, RCD-K, MLC, UPC, FNI, FAPC, FPJC and finally CNDP and FDLR all
 occupied and looted the gold-mining centres and the surrounding 
villages. In some instances, they established quasi-administrations and 
issued new gold-mining permits. In all instances, they imposed taxes, 
coerced other payments, killed, maimed and took revenge on artisanal 
gold miners for the most spurious reasons. 
National and international reactions to gold-mining related abuses 
The
 horrors of the First and Second Congo Wars, and the Ugandan-Rwandan 
occupations of the country’s most important mining sites, mobilised 
significant resistance by Congolese civil society. Justice Plus, for 
example, organised a campaign against ethnic persecutions and the 
illegal exploitation of natural resources. Activists from local 
organisations, such as ASADHO-Beni, were routinely arrested for 
denouncing mining activities by Ugandan forces. Officers of the Ugandan 
military, their local allies from RCD-K-ML and other rebel groups 
attempted to silence this resistance. However, they did not succeed 
because many Congolese activists denounced these abuses and contributed 
significantly to raising national and international attention. One 
important milestone towards greater recognition of the atrocities linked
 with gold-mining was reached when Congolese researchers and 
investigators supported Human Rights Watch and its landmark report “The 
Curse of Gold” published in May 2005. 
Civil
 society campaigns against the untransparent and unfair allocation of 
mineral rights by rebel-leader-turned-President Lauren-Desiree Kabila 
had already started after the First Congo War. In the year 2000, SYPA 
was established in Butembo as a network of local groups, including the 
Catholic Church and civil society organisations of the Kivus. The 
organisation grew quickly to national stature and became an important 
actor in the Inter-Congolese Dialogue, which was one of the principal 
peace initiatives created under the Sun City Accord in 2002. The 
Inter-Congolese Dialogue helped to ensure that the Congo’s Transitional 
Parliament would set up a parliamentary investigative committee to look 
into, among other things, the links between mining contracts and the 
continuation of war. 
This
 critical initiative, which would eventually be known as the Lutundula 
Commission, received very little – or no – backing from representatives 
of the international community. According to the report of the Lutundula
 Commission, countries such as the United States, Canada, Belgium and 
others refused to grant members of the Commission visas to investigate 
in companies in their countries of origin that were suspected of feeding
 into the conflict and mining cycle in the DRC. 
The
 international community largely ignored Congolese efforts – at times 
even undermining them – in order to pursue its own ideas for resolving 
the Congo’s natural resource problems. A pivotal moment came when the 
Permanent Representative of the US to the UN, Richard Holbrooke, and US 
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright decided that January 2000 (the 
month in which the US delegation was going to preside over the Security 
Council) would be dedicated to defining a global strategy to tackle the 
most persistent problems on the African continent. 
Holbrooke
 planned open meetings to discuss the conflicts in Burundi, the DRC, 
Angola and Sierra Leone and the scourge of AIDS. On 24 January 2000, the
 Security Council chaired by Albright welcomed the presidents of seven 
African countries; Laurent-Desire Kabila was the first president invited
 to the round table of the Security Council, followed by the presidents 
of Rwanda, Zambia, Mozambique, Uganda, Zimbabwe and Angola. 
Kabila
 had funded his long years hidden away in the Itombwe Mountains of South
 Kivu in part by gold smuggling and other commercial activities. When he
 went to war to oust Mobutu, the military forces of Rwanda and Uganda 
were important allies. Eventually they turned against each other, and 
the Second Congo War turned into a vicious war of attrition. Rwanda, 
Uganda and their Congolese allies were involved in resource extraction 
as they fought the Kabila regime. The fact that Kabila paid his foreign 
allies and their fighters with access to the Congo’s natural wealth did 
not stop him from stating bluntly to the Security Council: “Is there 
anyone here who is unaware of the systematic plundering of Congolese 
resources on and below the ground by the Rwandan, Ugandan and Burundian 
occupiers? Their booty – wood, diamonds, gold, cobalt and zebras – is 
all being sold on the open market, including in some of the countries 
represented here today.” 
What is illegal?          
With
 his reference to the ‘systematic plundering of Congolese resources’, 
Kabila set into motion a new dynamic in the conflict resolution 
dialogue. Following Kabila’s call for an intervention by the 
international community, the Security Council decided to send a mission 
led by Ambassador Holbrooke to Central Africa to define the steps to be 
taken in support of peace-making in the DRC. After a four-day blitz 
mission, Holbrooke and his colleagues delivered the defining report for 
all future Security Council actions on the Congo’s natural resources. 
The key recommendation was that the UN Secretary General should create a
 ‘UN Panel of Experts on the illegal exploitation of natural resources 
and other forms of wealth of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’. 
A
 critical point in the language, which was first suggested by Kabila and
 expanded on by the Holbrooke mission, was the concept that the Congo’s 
natural resources were exploited ‘illegally’. This term introduced an 
extremely contentious concept and the Panel of Experts described its 
struggle to define illegality in its first report. The report offered 
four criteria to determine illegality: violation of sovereignty; respect
 by actors for the existing regulatory frameworks in the country or 
territory where they operate; discrepancy between widely accepted trade 
and business practices and the conduct of business in the DRC; and, the 
violation of international law, including ‘soft’ law. The Panel further 
stated that it was going to ‘utilize the aforementioned elements in a 
complementary manner, refusing to be exclusive or to focus on one single
 element’. However, the Panel’s subsequent reports revealed that their 
work focused on one single element – the fourth criteria, using 
definitions derived from the OECD’s emerging guidelines. 
Based
 on this definition, the Panel released a report on 16 October 2002 with
 annexes of names of individuals and companies that it accused of 
exploiting the Congo’s natural resources illegally. Subsequently, the 
OECD guidelines and the associated national contact points were supposed
 to assume an adjudicatory role. However, it never proved particularly 
effective, especially where companies or individuals from OECD member 
states were involved. 
The
 Panel’s work have had more legitimacy had there been less reliance on 
the OECD guidelines and more grounding in the laws of the Congo. There 
is not one attempt in the Panel’s report to define the documented abuses
 as violations of Congolese laws, although President Joseph Kabila had 
signed the new Congolese Mining Law on 15 July 2002, three months before
 the release of the UN Panel report. 
Apparently
 relying on emerging Congolese legal structures was not an option. 
Indeed, using Congolese legal structures to define a strategy against 
illegal exploitation of the country’s natural resources would remain 
unacceptable for years to come, as the fate of Ministerial Decree 2503 
of February 2007 would demonstrate. The international community – 
especially the highly industrialised, mostly western members of the 
international community – wanted to build on the evolving standards of 
corporate social responsibility that were under development at the OECD 
at the time. However, the OECD’s voluntary Guidelines for Multinational 
Enterprises turned out to be ineffective in regulating the DRC’s mining 
sector. Eventually, investigations by the British NGO RAID revealed that
 virtually none of the companies and individuals identified by the Panel
 as being in violation of the OECD guidelines were subjected to any 
administrative procedure by their governments, as the OECD process 
promised. 
UN Sanctions against illegal exploitation of natural resources 
With
 the OECD process turning into a paper tiger, those in the DRC who had 
hoped to receive assistance from the international community in the 
rebuilding of a legitimate natural resource sector saw their options 
diminishing. By 2004, the UN’s natural resource Panel was discontinued, 
partly in response to heavy criticism of their evidentiary standards and
 methodology. However, the Security Council accepted one of their 
recommendations to impose an arms embargo on the Congo and established 
another UN Expert group to monitor compliance with the embargo. By 2004,
 the Group of Experts was appointed with a very narrowly defined arms 
embargo-monitoring mandate. 
While
 the natural resource panel had stirred up a lot of media attention, it 
was the new Group of Experts that convinced the Security Council in 
November 2005 to impose targeted UN sanctions against all major 
Congolese militia leaders and their affiliated businesspeople. The 
measures imposed on those most responsible for massacres in eastern 
Congo included the freezing of their assets and a travel ban. Although 
effective implementation of these measures would remain challenging, 
singling out these individuals as outcasts of the international 
community blocked their chances of ever achieving legitimacy. 
The
 Group also succeeded with its recommendations to the Security Council 
to further investigate individual culpability in the use of natural 
resource revenues to finance violations of the arms embargo. With the 
establishment of a hard standard for illegal exploitation of natural 
resources and strict evidentiary standards, people or companies 
‘illegally’ exploiting or diverting minerals from eastern Congo moved 
into the crosshairs of targeted sanctions. 
Using
 the threat of UN sanctions certainly was a valuable addition to the 
arsenal against perpetrators of violence, but to achieve lasting peace 
and security the linkages between natural resource exploitation and 
trade had to be based on a stronger footing. Both the UN Panel and 
senior officials within the DRC Ministry of Mines had come independently
 to the same conclusion: enhanced institutionalised solutions, such as 
mechanisms to trace natural resource origins, were required. 
The
 Ministry of Mines and CEEC were already seeking ways to develop a 
certification system, but it may have been somewhat premature for the 
officials of the transitional government since the mineral deposits in 
both North and South Kivu, the eastern sections of Maniema and Katanga, 
and Orientale were beyond the authority of the government. Customs 
agents at border crossings, tax collectors, and the officials of the 
subsidiaries of the Central Bank in the eastern provinces, along with 
many other government functionaries, did not accept the transitional 
government’s authority. In Bunia, the local headquarters and operations 
of OKIMO were taken over by the Ituri rebels, who also took all income 
from the artisanal gold-mining sites situated on the parastatal’s three 
huge gold concessions. At the same time, FDLR, Mayi-Mayi and other 
groups overran the artisanal and small-scale miners operating within the
 concession areas of SOKIMO. So why were the new functionaries in 
Kinshasa interested in devising traceability and certification systems? 
During
 that pre-election chaos, it was evident that the Congo and its natural 
resource sector would never find peace and prosperity unless at least 
two conditions could be fulfilled. Firstly, physical security in all 
parts of the Congo was key. And secondly, property rights and trading 
mechanisms for natural resources had to be secured. The same conceptual 
approach dominated the UN Panel’s agenda: first monitor compliance with 
and investigate violations of the arms embargo; and second investigate 
diversions of natural resources and interdict the revenue streams to 
illegal armed groups whenever possible. 
By
 early 2007, the democratic multi-party elections had given Joseph 
Kabila the presidency. On 5 February 2007, days before the new 
government took over, the outgoing Minister of Mines, Professor Matthieu
 Kalele-Ka-Bila, signed Ministerial Decree 2503, which laid out the 
administrative processes for the certification of precious and 
semi-precious stones and minerals. The new law was unequivocal: without 
CEEC certification, no minerals or stones could be exported. To further 
buttress the Congolese effort, the Group of Experts made two key 
recommendations in its next report. It recommended that the 
international community should provide financial, technical and 
administrative support to the implementation of the Congolese law. It 
also recommended that companies that could not demonstrate adequate due 
diligence practices should be sanctioned. 
Parallel
 to this development, Belgium, the former colonial power, wanted to play
 a leading role in the development and implementation of a natural 
resource certification system. A task force of Belgian specialists was 
set up and a study group was begun to not only devise a tracking 
methodology for copper and cobalt, but also to establish a 
Lubumbashi-based commodity exchange. Belgium was one of the elected 
members of the Security Council at the time and used this position to 
develop a high profile on natural resource and conflict issues. 
Simultaneously, Belgian representatives to the UN became particularly 
hostile to the UN Group of Expert’s recommendation to support the 
Congolese natural resource certification mechanisms. They also rejected 
an effort to clarify due diligence principles for anyone involved with 
the Congo’s natural resources as well as the Group’s evidence for the 
dominant role that Belgian companies played in Congo’s natural resource 
trade. 
Belgium
 succeeded in the short-term in stopping the Experts’ efforts. However, 
thanks to an initiative by the German government, the original concept 
of supporting the DRC government’s certification mechanism finally 
succeeded. But it would take another three years (and another Panel) 
before the Security Council endorsed the recommendation to impose UN 
sanctions against anyone who could not demonstrate adequate due 
diligence in the trading of minerals from eastern Congo. It would also 
take another violent convulsion of the east, pitching the Congolese army
 (the FARDC) and the peacekeeping forces of MONUC (later MONUSCO) 
against the renegade CNDP forces under General Laurent Nkundabataware 
and against the FDLR. Nkunda’s troops took control of numerous mining 
sites, collected taxes and imposed fees at will. Meanwhile, FDLR forces 
challenged the CNDP’s grab of mining properties and revenues. Mayi-Mayi 
militia forces and certain FARDC units pillaged, looted and raped with 
equal ferocity. In the two-year-long struggle, hundreds of thousands of 
Congolese fled and lost their belongings, thousands were killed, and 
untold numbers of girls and women were raped. Finally, as part of ‘Umoja
 Wetu’, Rwandan military forces arrested Nkunda in January 2009. 
Nkunda’s CNDP forces were then integrated into the FARDC under the 
leadership of General Bosco Ntaganda – another warlord who has been 
charged with war crimes by the International Criminal Court. 
Since
 that last major war, armed confrontations have consisted of fighting 
bands of severely diminished FDLR, Mayi-Mayi and newly formed groups. 
Thankfully, these military operations have mostly been reduced to local 
and short-term fights, with casualty numbers distinctly lower than at 
any other time during the past 15 years. 
Due diligence politics of President Kabila 
While
 the UN Security Council embraced due diligence principals for certain 
minerals originating in eastern DRC with resolutions 1952 (2010) and 
2021 (2011), the US Congress prepared its ‘Conflict Minerals Bill’. This
 measure is designed to force companies with SEC reporting obligations 
to disclose to the public if they import and use coltan 
(columbine-tantalite), cassiterite, wolframite and gold from eastern 
DRC. The bill was incorporated into the Dodd Frank Bill under section 
1502 and signed into law by President Obama on 21 July 2010. But its 
final implementation rules were only approved by the SEC in August 2012 
after a lengthy battle between activists and affected industry groups 
and lobbyists.  
However,
 even without its application the ‘Obama Law’ had an impact within a few
 months of his signing it. President Kabila took advantage of the global
 attention and on 20 September 2010 signed Decree 705 suspending mineral
 exports, although only from South and North Kivu and Maniema. On the 
same day, he also signed Decree 706, listing the following requirements 
for Congolese institutions to fulfil before he would lift the export 
suspension suspension – although none of these requirements appear to 
have been fulfilled when he lifted the suspension six months later 
without any explanation: 
SAESSCAM and the Ministry of Mines must: 
1.       Deploy their agents along the entire chain beginning with the point of origin to the point of refining; 
2.       Identify artisanal miners and their cooperatives, and verify that they operate legally; 
3.       Propose, together with the mining cadaster, new artisanal mining zones; 
4.       Assist artisanal miners to reorganise into mining cooperatives; 
5.       Complete the establishment of Centre de Negoce; and, 
6.       Establish, together with international partners, a map of artisanal mining sites. 
The Mining Cadaster and the Directorate of Mines must: 
1.       Deploy officers in the three provinces; 
2.       Suspend all registry examinations of current applications in the three provinces; 
3.       Close application process for any new registration in the three provinces; 
4.
       Examine, in collaboration with the mining services, whether – and
 how effectively – the development and construction of mining projects 
is proceeding and report to the Minister of Mines no later than 10 
October 2010; and, 
5.       Initiate forfeiture of all holders of mining titles who are in default, regardless of their situation. 
The CEEC must: 
1.       Reinforce efforts at all levels in the fight against fraud and smuggling of mining products. 
The three provincial governments must: 
1.       Ensure that no minerals will move during the suspension period; 
2.    Ensure that mining services are ready to implement and manage all measures of the decree; 
3.       Ensure the effective deployment of the technical services of the Minister of Mines; 
4.
       Identify all artisanal miners, traders, exporters, processing and
 refining facilities, as well as entities with mining permits; 
5.       Identify all artisanal and other mining sites; 
6.
       Require accountability and verify the evidence for payment of 
taxes that were due by 1 January 2010 at the place of operation of the 
traders and exporters, and review all information about the origin of 
the funds that are used to buy minerals; 
7.       Verify whether funds were appropriately repatriated after minerals were exported since 1 January 2010; 
8.       Co-ordinate the government authorities in the fight against fraud in the mining industry; 
9.       Encourage permit holders to stay on schedule with their development and construction; 
10.   Apply sanctions in accordance with the law against anybody who contravenes the dispositions of the decree; 
11.   Organise a fund for the realisation of basic infrastructure; and, 
12.
   Provide, within 30 days from the decree entering into force, an 
evaluation of supervision measures with a view towards the eventual 
lifting of the suspension. 
The
 SARW research found no evidence that any of the requirements listed in 
Decree 706 have been fulfilled. While SARW did not systematically 
research the precise details of the suspension order, it did collect 
anecdotal evidence. For example, Chinese buyers continued to export 
cassiterite, coltan and wolframite throughout the suspension – and did 
so at great profit. According to buyers in Goma and Bukavu, who abided 
by the suspension decree, buyers from TTT Mining and Huaying Trading 
exploited the growing desperation of artisanal cassiterite miners, who 
were afraid of losing their livelihoods and were willing to sell their 
product at significant discounts (of up to 80 percent compared to world 
market valuations). 
SARW
 has found no evidence of a stoppage in gold production and export. 
Since almost all gold still leaves the DRC illegally, it was predictable
 that gold exporters would ignore President Kabila’s suspension, 
although artisanal gold miners came under significant price pressures 
(losing on average 20-25 percent compared to their normal selling 
price). 
President
 Kabila’s decree appears to suffer from the same weakness as the ‘Obama 
Law’. Both can be characterised as being overly ambitious and too far 
removed from the realities on the ground. Both laws have delivered 
little improvement for artisanal and small-scale mining communities. The
 US Conflict Minerals law suffers from the additional problem that the 
SEC only operationalized its application in August 2012. Until the law 
is properly implemented and enforced, any possible impact is based on 
voluntary compliance by individual companies.  
Hopes
 for the eventual success of the law are not high. Chinese buyers and 
manufacturers have already made it abundantly clear by their actions 
that they will not follow any due diligence. The front is already 
crumbling. SARW is aware of a number of other major buyers of 
cassiterite, coltan, wolframite, and gold who will not wait much longer 
before they start buying and exporting as well. Their reasoning is 
compelling: if the US Conflict Minerals Law only creates competitive 
advantages for those who can afford not to comply, the market is 
distorted and the law is not sustainable. 
There
 are other parallels between President Kabila’s ill-fated suspension and
 the US Conflict Minerals Law. Over the past 15 years, the cycles of 
violence have repeatedly demonstrated that the control of mining sites 
is never static. One month a site is occupied or exploited by a militia,
 the next it is ‘liberated’ by renegade FARDC forces that allow 
government administrators to do their work. In another month, no armed 
groups are present at all, but government agents start to exploit the 
artisanal miners. The possible exception to this pattern is Walikale in 
North Kivu. Since the beginning of the coltan boom in the late 1990s it 
has always been occupied by one or another illegally armed group. 
Successfully implementing the Conflict Minerals Law or fulfilling the 
requirements set forth in the suspension decree requires accurate, 
sustained and up-to-date monitoring of the situation in all mining 
regions at all times. No one has any illusions that the DRC government 
is currently living – or indeed can live – up to this responsibility. 
Gold mining in Maniema Province 
Of
 all the eastern Provinces of the DRC, Maniema is the most isolated and 
least populated. Its rich and highly diversified natural resource 
deposits attracted some investments during and immediately after the 
colonial period, including limited industrialised alluvial gold 
exploitation by Belgika Or and Symetain. Road connections from the 
surrounding provinces to Maniema are poor with ground transportation 
from Maniema to the most important regional trading gateways (including 
Kisangani to the north and Bukavu to the East) coming to a virtual halt 
during the rainy season. The railway network has been completely 
destroyed. Only a few local aviation companies provide links to the 
outside world, but the transport is provided with old aeroplanes that 
are inadequately maintained and do not meet accepted safety standards. 
Weak
 institutional structures make a mockery of the entire mining industry. 
There are not only statistical inconsistencies between reports from 
state agencies, but their data reflect such unrealistically low overall 
gold output (ranging from 7 to 29 kilograms per year) that the effort to
 compile data might as well be abandoned (see table 4). Provincial and 
national authorities do not reliably fulfil their supervisory role – for
 example, ensuring that gold traders and exporters are licensed and 
follow all legal requirements. The weakness of state institutions is 
demonstrated by the fact that of the 537 agents of the Provincial Mining
 Division who are supposed to be active, only 137 have received 
contracts so far. The rest are left in limbo regarding their authority 
and their income. 
  
 Inconsistent statistical data about annual provincial gold production and exports 
Year/ Production - Provincial Mining Division/ Production - SAESSCAM/ Export - CEEC 
  
2007              29 097.7 gram                               n/a                               7 495.5 gram 
  
2008              15 712.9 gram                              3 975.9 gram                  8 267.9 gram 
  
2009              16 983.5 gram                               n/a                                15 035 gram 
  
2010               25 103.3 gram                              n/a                                      n/a 
  
2011               22 180.2 gram                               n/a                                     n/a 
  
However, industrial exploration and exploitation will soon increase in Maniema Province. The Australian company, Erongo Energy Limited,
 has acquired a 70 percent share of nine permits originally owned by 
Afrimines Resources. The company is run by a former Tiger Resources 
Executive and Klaus Eckhof, formerly of Motogold. Testing and drilling 
started in 2011 on some of the properties. The Erongo projects are to 
the west of Banro’s Namoya mine, which is situated in the border region 
near Salamabila. When the mine commences industrial operation in 2013 it
 will be Maniema’s most important industrial mineral exploitation 
venture. 
Construction
 for the Namoya project is underway and throughout this year several 
hundred locals will be employed in the construction phase, while an 
additional contingent of permanent employees will be added once the 
Namoya plant is operational next year. Around four villages are directly
 affected by Banro’s build-up and will have to be moved. Representatives
 of the company are negotiating with artisanal miners to determine who 
should be considered a genuine resident and as such, eligible for Banro 
Foundation’s compensation scheme. Predictably, the number of affected 
residents differed significantly when the negotiation began, with Banro 
recognising 106 residents while the locals identified 856 residents. The
 likely compromise will provide a significant number of new houses, 
financial compensation, and a yet-to-be-determined number of job 
opportunities for suitable candidates at the Namoya plant. 
Localised
 confrontations between the FARDC and UN peacekeepers on one side and 
remnants of the FDLR and Mayi-Mayi groups in North and South Kivu on the
 other side produce spill over security issues affecting Maniema’s gold 
production. Since the SARW research commenced, FDLR units, Mayi-Mayi 
Simba and other groups sometimes withdrew from Shabunda in South Kivu or
 from Walikale in North Kivu in the direction of Salamabila or Lubutu 
respectively. Small, semi-permanent Mayi-Mayi and FDLR units, as well as
 FARDC troops already deployed in Maniema, frequently harass artisanal 
gold miners along the Maniema-South Kivu border. 
For
 Paul Wembolenga, the provincial director of FEC, the only issue is 
whether the artisanal miners choose to pay armed aggressors voluntarily 
or not. François Muhemedi, the chief of the Provincial Mining Division, 
believes that there are a few soldiers in the gold-mining areas along 
the border, but that none of them bother the miners. “Members of the 
Police and FARDC may at times, during their official missions, demand 
from the artisanal mining communities a per diem for their rations.” But
 in Wembolenga’s experience, armed groups and military units come to 
gold-mining areas for three reasons only: “Kidnapping, rape and 
looting.” However Wembolenga does admit that sometimes FARDC troops do 
intervene for their protection. Nevertheless, Monsieur Ibrahim, the 
chief of SAESSCAM, said: “In some sites, the security is not 
sufficient.” As a result, many communities fear the military and are 
deeply distrustful. Hélène Andjelani who leads Réseau Wa Mama Simameni, a
 self-help group for women, summarised her experience: “There is no 
security for us.” 
On
 the list of most worrisome issues for artisanal and small-scale miners,
 physical security is topped only by the daily transgressions committed 
by government officials. “I have personally witnessed several incidents 
when government officials have extorted the miners,” explained 
Wembolenga. Agents of the provincial mining division, SAESSCAM, CEEC, 
DGM, ANR and the mining police are usually found on or near the mining 
sites. The individuals interviewed are in agreement that these 
government agencies offer scant benefits. “The biggest challenge is the 
many taxes that government agents impose on us,” said Sefu Zakunani, 
secretary to the artisanal miners association of Bikenge. “We are quite 
certain that these agents are not channelling the money they get from us
 into the treasury of the province or the state.” SAESSCAM agents enjoy 
very little respect from the artisanal miners of Bikenge. “We want 
nothing to do with them; they give us nothing but take taxes for which 
there is no legal foundation.” 
Wembolenga
 makes similar accusations: “The mining police come here with the only 
mission to get the miners’ money.” His members made Jean Népomgono 
Kaborongo, the president of FEC Kampene, aware that the representatives 
of SAESSCAM provide no assistance or training to the miners. He believes
 that the same agents are working closely together with the Provincial 
Mining Division to dictate who is permitted to access a mine and work 
there and who is not. 
Defao
 Waupenda, the chief of the artisanal miners association of Bikenge, 
believes that many problems are fundamentally connected with widespread 
ignorance of the laws in force. This basic lack of information and 
understanding leads to what he describes as “acrobatics in order to 
obtain all necessary documents and widespread discouragement and 
multiplicity of taxations.” 
The
 improper behaviour of national and provincial government employees 
extends to the exploitation of children. Alphonse Kibwe, a 12-year-old 
miner who works on gold-mining sites around Kailo, northeast of Kindu 
revealed: “I have to pay US$20 to US$50 for a document that the 
government agents say gives me the right to mine.” On the mining sites 
where he works, other children, including orphans or abandoned or 
demobilised child soldiers work in the mines. “They help with washing 
the gold, they carry the sand bags, and girls work in road-side stores 
or as prostitutes.” None of these activities worry government officials.
 “They only come here to extract money from me,” said Kibwe. Rather than
 protecting miners and seeing to it that safer work conditions prevail 
in the mines, government agents, the traditional leadership of the local
 villages, soldiers and security forces compete with each other for 
control over the mines and the gold. In the midst of this chaos, the 
12-year-old boy has adjusted to the rule of the strong: “We are on good 
terms with them as long as we keep paying.” 
Bongelo
 Balimwatcha, a 53-year-old miner working on the same sites as Kibwe 
related very similar experiences: “Where we have armed government 
officials, we are being harassed and exploited. The worst are the mining
 police officers who fine us for a never-ending list of infractions.” 
The irony is that insecurity for the miners increases dramatically once 
the military arrives. Balimwatcha explained: “Extortions and violence 
increase when they are here.” Representatives of the government are not 
permanently stationed in Kailo. “But they do visit us on a regular basis
 whenever they are broke,” said Balimwatcha. 
Stéphane
 Lutika, a former artisanal miner who now earns his living as a small 
gold trader described how the region around Kailo used to be 
destabilised by Mayi-Mayi groups: “The military has gained control over 
our area and should now create conditions that promote secure mining. 
But we pay for the peace. The soldiers show up every day to get manioc, 
rice, banana and oil.” In addition, soldiers are often also competitors 
for the rich deposits in the mines. “They come in and start to dig in 
our richest mines – whether we want them here or not.” A young 
restaurant operator, Amba Yengola, described the bureaucratic hurdles to
 obtain permits necessary to work as a miner: “We have to do a lot of 
acrobatics to get our permits, and yet, we are still bothered by the 
government and military who come to our mining sites.” Twelve-year-old 
Kasimu Mujana described the relationship with the government: “Tense and
 particularly with soldiers who we do not trust.” Kasimu explained that 
miners must satisfy many demands for money and goods, but the military 
still does not look after their security. “Many children work in the 
mines and young women are used for prostitution. There is no protection 
for us.” 
 
 
Gold mining in North Kivu Province 
While gold 
deposits in North Kivu receive far less international attention than the
 province’s tin, cassiterite, coltan or wolframite mining, artisanal 
gold production is nevertheless a substantial contributor to the local 
economy. Located between the Kilo Moto gold belt in Orientale and the 
Twangiza-Namoya gold belt in South Kivu-Maniema, there are approximately
 12 regions with artisanal and small-scale gold-mining in North Kivu – 
Walikale, Masisi, Lutunguru, Manzia-Luholy-Lubereri, Mohanga, 
Lundjulu-Loiki-Ubiro, Lubero, Makwasu, Lutela (includes Manguredjipa), 
Biabune-Loya and Bilolo-Mobissio-Abakuasimbo. Up to now, very limited 
exploration has been conducted at these locations apart from the 
prospecting and semi-industrial exploitation that was conducted by a 
Belgian colonial company at Manguredjipa. 
 
North Kivu’s 
artisanal gold-mining communities, which are small and dispersed 
compared to those in Ituri, have been under heavy pressure during the 
past 15 years of violence. Successive waves of militias and bandits 
repeatedly displaced many miners, forcing them into a nomadic lifestyle 
and pushing them largely outside the reach of traditional academic 
studies. 
 
The relative 
isolation of most of these communities, the poor state of the roads, and
 their complete dependence on regional traders, who buy their gold and 
sell them foodstuffs and consumer goods, comes at a heavy price for 
artisanal and small-scale miners (see table 1). 
 
To fully assess
 the socio-economic conditions of artisanal and small-scale gold miners 
in eastern Congo it is necessary to analyse the individual buying power 
they have in their communities. For this purpose, SARW collected retail 
prices from the Congo’s principal trading hubs and the isolated 
gold-mining sites. The discrepancies in the retail price of tools, 
foodstuffs and consumer goods range from 0 to over 100 percent, with no 
apparent justification other than the dictate of local vendors or their 
suppliers in Kisangani, Butembo, Goma and Bukavu. The dominant sense is 
that traders are able to extract a heavy bonus from the gold miners. 
 
Manguredjipa 
Manguredjipa is
 located in Lubero Territory and its only road connection is to Butembo,
 about 100km east. Manguredjipa is the centre of sprawling gold-mining 
communities. Several thousand people living in Manguredjipa, while 
anywhere from 30,000-45,000 are widely distributed in the 10,000 square 
km of surrounding forests and mountains. There is no available 
information about the quantity of gold that is currently extracted from 
this region. 
 
One 
international mining company, Loncor Resources, has acquired 55 
prospecting permits and in 2009 commenced an exploration programme in 
and around the historic extraction sites of Manguredjipa. According to 
Loncor, over 300,000 ounces of alluvial gold and platinum were extracted
 from the area under the Belgian colonial company, Miniere des Grands 
Lacs (MGL), between the 1920s and the 1960s. 
 
The current 
gold rush has turned the traditional order of Manguredjipa upside down. 
According to the Chef De Secteur, Batsosi Nyamwisi, “historically 
Manguredjipa was the breadbasket of Butembo and of the Grand Nord thanks
 to large rice and palm plantations. During the war, mining for coltan 
and later for gold pushed farming almost completely out of this region.”
 The residents of Manguredjipa now import foodstuffs to ensure the 
survival of the rapidly growing population. A general hospital, primary 
and secondary schools (some of them Catholic schools), as well as a 
number of churches serve the population relatively well. Since 
gold-mining became the dominant activity of many thousands of people in 
this area, SAESSCAM, the Provincial Mining Division, the mining police, 
ANR and FARDC have arrived too. 
 
SARW focused 
its monitoring on three quarries: Bakele, Byamungu and Bichakuchaku – 
all of them located within 15km of the centre of Manguredjipa. In 
addition to interviews with artisanal diggers, carriers, crushers, 
washers and panners, the SARW researchers also talked with gold traders,
 local suppliers of foodstuffs, representatives of the Provincial Mining
 Division, the mining police, military intelligence, the head of the 
local medical services, Catholic priests, and other religious leaders. 
Chef de Secteur Batsosi Nywamwisi (a recent arrival in Manguredjipa) 
also assisted with information. There was no representative of SAESSCAM 
available in Manguredjipa during the time that the SARW researchers 
worked there. 
 
Until very 
recently, the tens of thousands of miners working in and around 
Manguredjipa operated without protection from the FARDC or other state 
security. Mayi-Mayi groups would periodically come to Manguredjipa and 
“disturb us” – as one artisanal digger put it – but all artisanal miners
 reported that the threat of militia attacks has diminished 
significantly. Only the Chef de Secteur warned that he had reports of 
Mayi-Mayi groups controlling some outlying mining sites, which are 
several days march to the west of Manguredjipa. The town is now 
protected by a recently-deployed FARDC regiment. “When they arrived they
 had no supplies whatsoever, nor money to buy food or shelter,” 
explained Nywamwisi. “I had to go around town and beg for food for 300 
soldiers and officers.” Throughout the SARW research period in 
Manguredjipa, there were no signs of confrontations with armed groups. 
However, on the return to Butembo, a short fire fight between a FARDC 
patrol and a small group of combatants blocked the road for several 
hours. The identity or affiliation of the combatants could not be 
clarified, as they retreated without taking any casualties. 
 
The absence of 
any sustained militia threats does not mean that there is no violence in
 the gold-mining areas. Selemany, an artisanal miner who is working on 
an old abandoned Belgian mining site without having obtained legal 
permits, stated: “There are only bandits who are organised by the FARDC 
soldiers. They extort payments from us.” A miner who did not want to be 
named for fear of retribution confirmed: “Our biggest problems stem from
 gangs of young villagers who come here to chase us around the mines 
until we pay. They are not really organised but they like to pretend 
that they are militias.” One of the biggest risks, he explained, is 
robbery on the roads to and from the mines. 
 
Artisanal 
small-scale gold miners explain how the fees imposed by the agents of 
the Provincial Mining Division and the taxes raised by national 
government authorities are a serious threat to their livelihoods. While 
most of the miners could afford the legitimate fees and taxes, the 
additional illegal extortions and the daily incidents of ‘la petite 
corruption add up to an amount that exceeds the means of most artisanal 
miners. On average, the fee paid for the annual artisanal mining permit 
ranges from US$15 – US$25, which is often lower than the official 
government mandated price. However, almost all miners pay various 
surcharges for the permit. Once they pay, they become targets for 
further random extortions and other fictitious taxes by the agents of 
the Provincial Mining Division. The flood of charges, fees, duties, 
taxes and other levies are too much for many artisanal and small-scale 
miners, and they give up any attempt to operate within the legal space. 
“I don’t earn enough money to pay for these papers,” said Selemany 
explaining his decision to conduct illegal artisanal mining activities. 
 
Extra-legal 
financial impositions exacerbate the already deeply anchored belief that
 the government is not a force for good in gold mining. Not even 
SAESSCAM, the agency that is supposed to support and guide artisanal and
 small-scale miners, is appreciated. “The authorities only come here to 
get our money,” said one artisanal miner. “Most of the time, SAESSCAM 
does not even have an agent in Manguredjipa.” When questioned about 
whether they are aware of SAESSCAM’s mandate to assist with safer 
extraction methodologies or with the replacement of mercury in the 
processing of gold ore with safer practices, a group of miners, who 
wished to stay unnamed, answered: “No.” It is clear that the lack of 
support and assistance from government agents is a serious hindrance to a
 safe mining industry. 
 
The impotence 
of state authority is glaringly obvious even before one arrives in 
Manguredjipa. The first half of the road between Manguredjipa and 
Butembo was recently improved and is in fairly good condition, even 
during the rainy season. However, over the past three years, the last 
40km of road have deteriorated to the point that not even 4x4 vehicles 
can operate. The only practical modes of transport are light 
motorcycles, bicycles, and the muscle strength of thousands of people 
carrying goods over many kilometres. Traders from Manguredjipa transport
 gold hidden in palm oil containers, sacks of vegetables, or other goods
 that they want to sell in Butembo. On their return journey, they carry 
rice, palm oil and manioc, beer, soft drinks, shovels and picks, 
batteries and electronic gadgets, clothes and household items. 
Occasionally a few 10-15 ton trucks attempt to traverse this stretch, 
but they get stuck and their drivers are forced to hire locals to dig 
through metres of mud in order to move their vehicles forward, inch by 
inch. On average, a truck takes 1-2 weeks to cover the last 40km to 
Manguredkipa. 
 
Crossing the 
mud requires backbreaking effort, but it is the first step in 
transporting raw gold from Manguredjipa and exchanging it food and basic
 necessities. However, the exchange is between massively under-priced 
gold and massively overpriced food and goods. SARW has calculated that 
the gold miners in Manguredjipa and other gold-mining centres of North 
Kivu pay on average 45 percent more for food, tools and consumer goods 
than they would in Goma. 
 
Despite their 
important economic contributions to the region, gold miners receive 
virtually nothing in exchange – including no attention or services from 
the government. Gold extraction is accompanied by serious violations of 
human rights, especially against women and children. “There are no 
measures taken against the frequent cases of sexual violence against 
girls, women and children in general. There is no police or judicial 
intervention, no place where victims can go and find protection,” stated
 a high-ranking official of the provincial government. An artisanal 
miner and father added: “How can we report our problems about illegal 
and exorbitant taxation, about the lack of protection and legal remedies
 when our women and daughters are being harassed, and in most cases the 
perpetrators are government officials?” 
 
Walikale 
Until a few 
years ago, Walikale was inaccessible by road either from Goma, Bukavu or
 Kisangani. Since 2005, thanks to the efforts of international donors, 
passable roads have been built connecting Bukavu and Goma with Walikale.
 The road from Kisangani is only passable by passenger vehicles as far 
as Lubutu. Before the roads were constructed, the only way to access 
Walikale – in an isolated, mountainous area 270km west of Goma – was a 
short asphalt airstrip built by RCD-Goma over 10 years ago on which STOL
 aircraft can land. Although the edge of the strip is littered with the 
wrecks and debris of crashed planes, it remains the only landing site 
for the entire region. 
 
Roads are the 
principal entry point for all consumer products for the tens of 
thousands of inhabitants of the region. In exchange for these supplies, 
raw minerals with a value of hundreds of millions of dollars are 
exported to the regional trading centres. Most of these minerals are 
delivered in sacks after arduous 50km walks through swampy forest from 
the tin-oxide (cassiterite) and wolframite deposits of Bisie, and from 
other artisanal mining sites. 
 
The massive 
wealth generated by the informal mining industry and the ubiquity of 
rebels and corrupt FARDC soldiers, who illegally exploit the mining 
communities, has made Walikale the most publicised example of a 
conflict-mineral zone – with good justification. Following bloody 
contests between RCD-Goma, FDLR and Mayi-Mayi up to 2004, Walikale, the 
cassiterite supply lines, and Bisie ended up under the control of the 
renegade and unintegrated 85th FARDC brigade. 
 
“On average we 
have to flee from armed attacks every six months. This insecurity has 
never changed since we started gold-mining here,” explained Nelson 
Muzema, an artisanal gold miner interviewed at the Wanyarukula mining 
site near Osso centre. “We have become nomads but with limited spaces to
 move to.” The southern part of the Walikale region is under the control
 of the government, but the north of the territory is controlled by the 
FDLR. Until very recently, Bisie, Omate and Mutchele were under the 
control of the Nduma Defense Force – better known as Mayi-Mayi Sheka, 
formed by Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka. Until a few years ago Sheka was the 
manager of the Groupe Minier Bangandula (GMB), a group established by 
leading business families from Goma who vied for control over the mining
 concessions of Bisie. However, CAMI had granted exploration permits for
 these deposits to Mining and Processing Congo (MPC), a company 
controlled by South African investors. In March 2011, MPC sold 70 
percent of its assets to the Canadian company Alphamin Resources Corp, 
which has now installed its own management. According to guarantees 
given directly by President Kabila to MPC in 2009, all FARDC units would
 leave Bisie by mid-June 2009. This guarantee only emboldened Sheka and 
others to move in again on the rich mining regions. 
 
For gold miners
 and traders, the security provided by legitimate FARDC troops has its 
price. “We are required to pay at least 1000 FC for each gram of gold we
 produce,” explained Nelson Muzema, which is the cost of keeping the 
soldiers in Wanyarukula friendly. “If we produce greater quantities, 
they take one twentieth of our income.” 
 
In the Walikale
 region – widely known for its rich cassiterite mines – gold is an 
attractive hedge during times when cassiterite and wolframite fetch less
 lucrative prices on the world markets. The SARW research focused on the
 gold-mining sites of Zua Idée, Omate, Muchele, Matungu and Kintsimba. 
In all of these sites, SARW found that artisanal gold miners are subject
 to considerable violence, extortion and economic hardship. 
 
The lack of 
credible government authority is aggravated by the unreliable or 
predatory behaviour of its agents. “On our site there are no officials 
of the Provincial Mining Division,” stated Faustin Arthur Bingombe, a 
miner who is also director of a small company in Wanyarukula. “They come
 by for inspections,” clarified his colleague Limu Papy, the chief of 
the Etoile Company at Zua Idée. “Every time these government agents are 
visiting us, we have to arrange for a proper reception. We have to host 
them with a meal and provide transportation for them. All of this costs a
 lot of money.” 
 
For Tshiwara 
Bajunda, who works in Zua Idée, the role of the SAESSCAM agents is a 
mystery: “We are not aware what their role is, and we have never 
received any assistance or contributions from them.” Zebo Makenda Ize 
who works with the LK small-scale mining operation in Zua Idée 
confirmed: “SAESSCAM has never given us any kind of training.” Balagizi 
Butu stated bluntly: “The government representatives are extorting us 
with each sale of gold.” 
 
One of the 
problems that plague the local gold trading communities is the 
increasing circulation of fake gold and the inability of government 
agents to intervene against this emerging criminal element. “There are 
significant quantities circulating,” explained Mboko Kapunyola Raphaël, 
head of Isolé des Mines in Walikale. “It is usually offered for around 
30,000 FC when real gold goes for up to 60,000 FC per gram.” 
 
Fraudulent gold
 scales are another widespread criminal ploy that cuts into the income 
of miners and traders. Lwaboshi Chiraga, a small gold trader based in 
Walikale centre explained: “We have great difficulties to make ends 
meet. Somehow in Bukavu, where we sell our gold, they seem to have more 
exact gold scales.” Once the traders from Walikale arrive there, they 
always end up with less gold than what they had weighed in Walikale. “We
 lose every time we go to Bukavu,” said Chiraga. At the same time they 
have to watch out that their business is conducted when the government 
agents are not around. “It costs us too much money when they are present
 and demand their share.” 
 
Gold mining in Orientale Province 
 
Nowhere
 is artisanal and small-scale gold-mining anchored more deeply into the 
history, economy and suffering of the Congolese people than it is in the
 Ituri District, the western section of Ortientale Province. Over the 
past 15 years, beginning with the First Congo War, Ituri’s gold-mining 
regions spiralled into uncontrolled ethnic violence. During the Second 
Congo War, when Ugandan and Rwandan troops occupied and thoroughly 
pillaged most sites, the remaining infrastructure of the major 
parastatal company OKIMO was dismantled, and whatever pieces of value 
that were left were hauled off across the border to Uganda. For three 
years, a succession of warlords battled each other for temporary control
 of the gold mines around Mongbwalu and Watsa. Beginning in 2004, the UN
 and the Transitional Government of the Congo made a determined effort 
to bring peace to Ituri. Eventually, the leaders of the most violent 
militias were sent off for prosecution at the ICC in The Hague, others 
were incarcerated in Kinshasa and international mining companies were 
invited back to restore the dilapidated operations. At that point, OKIMO
 existed only as a terribly undermanaged entity, with its staff in Bunia
 thinking and operating as if they were independent of the company’s 
headquarters in Kinshasa 
 
During
 the post-war period, exploration agreements between OKIMO and 
international joint venture partners, such as Anglo Gold Ashanti and 
Motogold, were signed under less than transparent conditions. A third 
international partner, Mwana Africa, obtained exploration rights. 
However, the terms of these contracts soon became subject to contentious
 renegotiations because the DRC government discovered a number of unfair
 terms. By 2007, the original permit holders had to surrender their 
rights and make room for new international partnerships: 
 
- The
 only major gold operation left unscathed was Mwana Gold, owner of the 
Zani-Kodo project situated west of Aru, whose contract was signed in 
June 2005. Mwana controlled 80 percent and OKIMO retained 20 percent of 
the project. The sites on which the company conducted its exploration 
were mined industrially until 1964. Currently, there is no timetable for
 commencement of industrial mining and processing.
 
- The
 Mongbwalu project downsized to half its original territory and is now 
called Ashanti Goldfield Kilo (AGK) with 13.78 percent still controlled 
by OKIMO. The project is commonly referred to as AGK. The joint venture 
partners project the treatment of 500,000 tons of gold ore per year over
 five years at their first subterranean exploitation site at 
Adidi-Kanga. The date of inauguration of that mine has not yet been set.
 
- The
 Kibali project replaced Motogold and is now operated as a 90/10 joint 
venture between Randgold, Anglo Gold Ashanti and OKIMO. The project is 
advancing rapidly towards operationalising one open pit and one 
underground mining site, as well as one processing plant. Limited 
production is expected to commence by 2014 with 600,000 ounces of gold 
ore at 4.1g/t gold per annum for the first 12 years. Camps for 
construction workers, who will be recruited from nearby communities, and
 the resettlement of 15 communities are progressing according to the 
social contribution plans approved by all partners.
 
- Kilo
 Goldmines Ltd is a Canadian gold exploration company that has secured 
an exploration permit from OKIMO for a 7000 square km area to the west 
of the Kibali project. No data is yet available about exploration or 
exploitation.
 
- In
 July 2010, OKIMO signed an agreement with the Swedish junior 
gold-mining company, Mineral Invest International AB, for a 1442 square 
km area, which is known as the Wanga deposits. They are situated south 
of the road connecting Faradje and Dungu. So far, the company has 
conducted preliminary exploratory steps only. It intends to develop the 
property, possibly in a joint venture with a large gold-mining company. 
The company, which is listed on the Swedish Stock Exchange, is involved 
in the mineral trade, but it is uncertain whether they will engage in 
gold trade or export in the DRC.
 
- Negotiations
 for a number of additional exploration permits to junior mining 
companies were ongoing during late 2011 and into 2012. 
 
 
International
 gold-mining companies have also shown increasing interest in gold 
deposits located outside the OKIMO properties. Loncor Resources has 
acquired several exploration rights in the province, one of which is 
located at Ngayu, 270km northeast of Kisangani. Around Yindi, important 
gold deposits were historically exploited by Belgian enterprises. 
 
Thanks
 to the strong interest of industrial mining companies, the region 
should experience significant growth in the coming years. For artisanal 
and small-scale miners, however, this is a time of heightened concerns. 
For some, eventual displacement and loss of access to traditional 
artisanal mining might be inevitable. Others might be affected in more 
positive ways. Social impact mitigation schemes require that all 
companies wishing to engage in industrial mining in the DRC provide 
employment, resettlement in furnished housing, schools and improved 
medical care for local residents and artisanal miners. But for the time 
being, a sense of insecurity (and sometimes anger at the foreign 
companies) dominates the discourse. 
 
In
 large part, the insecurities result from very poor communication 
strategies by the joint venture partners. While the companies appear to 
live up to all legally mandated disclosure statements, operating plans, 
socio-economic assessments, papers and studies that discuss eventual 
displacements and resettlements of villages, or employment 
opportunities, none of these important documents are published in the 
local languages spoken by the affected populations. The lack of correct 
information extends to the most elementary level. For most locals, the 
correct names and roles of OKIMO and its joint venture AGK are shrouded 
in mystery. There is ongoing confusion about the name of the company. 
The fact that SOKIMO (the legally correct name for the company) is no 
longer a parastatal but is a public company has not yet registered with 
the informal mining community of Ituri District. 
 
For
 artisanal and small-scale miners, it matters a great deal whether they 
operate on property controlled by SOKIMO or dig for gold on land under 
the jurisdiction of the Provincial Mining Division. Emmanuel Maki, the 
technical director of the small-scale mining operation at Kipe Yayo, 
which is within the SOKIMO-AGK land area said: “The company has signed 
an exploitation contract with me. In exchange they demand 30 percent of 
the sand we dig out and charge US$1000 per 500 square metres we use per 
year.” The remaining output of the mine is for the contractor, his 
sub-contractors, their labourers, material and tools. On the other hand,
 an ‘Encadreur’,
 who operates as the primary contractor pays 30 percent to SOKIMO but 
keeps 30 percent and distributes the remaining 40 percent among his 
local sub-contractors or mine manager, also known as ‘De Trou’. He in turn decides how much to pay his labourers. 
 
The
 labourers are hired to dig, carry and wash the sand. For these workers,
 the income they earn under the SOKIMO system can vary significantly. On
 one site SARW researchers found women carriers at Iga-Barriere who earn
 as little as 200 FC per day, whereas at another site nearby the diggers
 take home 8000 FC per day (converted into weekly pay this is 
approximately US$50). Despite these local variations the conditions that
 artisanal and small-scale miners find outside the SOKIMO-controlled 
area are much more favourable. The lawful annual fee for the artisanal 
mining permit is US$25. In principle no other charges should apply – a 
huge advantage over their colleagues labouring inside the SOKIMO 
perimeter. They are very much aware of these differences, as Basa 
Mateso, manager of the Nizi IV mine and chief of Baluma Village 
confirmed: “… the barrage of bribes, taxes and other demands by 
government agents add up so that we cannot afford them.” Unfortunately, 
Mateso is caught inside the SOKIMO territory. 
 
Mongbwalu
What
 is commonly referred to as the Mongbwalu gold-mining site encompasses a
 large area where informal or formal mining has been in existence for 
over 100 years. It is estimated that about 80 percent (or 36,000–42,000)
 of the people living in Mongbwalu depend on artisanal and small-scale 
gold mining. There are hundreds of other mining communities within the 
permit area of the Mongbwalu project, each with a significant population
 of artisanal and small-scale miners. 
 
Operating
 as artisanal or small-scale miners on the Mongbwalu site imposes 
different conditions compared to other parts of the DRC. As a 
parastatal, OKIMO has the privilege of licensing artisanal and 
small-scale mining operators wishing to be active on its properties. In 
order to better assess the relationship between OKIMO and its private 
sector partners and between Anglo Goldfields Kilo and the artisanal 
mining community, the SARW research focused both on outlying areas and 
mining sites in the immediate vicinity of the future Mongbwalu 
industrial zone. 
 
Lebi
 Faruku, a manager of a mine in Pluto highlighted the ambiguity in which
 the artisanal and small-scale miners must operate: “AGK has suspended 
the issuing of mining licenses. However, the company pretends to be 
blind when thousands of artisanal miners continue to exploit gold. 
Traditional chiefs are selling them these rights even in contravention 
of AGK’s property rights.” 
 
“We
 don’t experience many difficulties,” stated Eric Ukumu, an artisanal 
miner who works at the Pluto site, “except that we are on OKIMO’s 
property and it is impossible to obtain a mining permit from them.” 
Ukumu and other artisanal miners in Pluto are seriously bothered by the 
amount of exaggerated tax-schemes that state agents impose on them, 
notwithstanding the fact that none of them have any legal mining 
permits. Government services such as the Ministry of Economy, Mines, or 
the Environment are only acting as tax collectors. “It is 
disproportionate, particularly compared to the old times when we would 
give OKIMO 1 gram of raw gold every 2 weeks,” said Faruku. He then went 
even further: “We are victims of veritable organised extortion by the 
civil servants.” Why, he asked, do the miners have to pay taxes to the 
officials from the Ministry of Environment when they do absolutely 
nothing to protect the environment? 
 
For
 Matthieu Ovoa, the co-ordinator of CEMAO, there are even more 
principled issues at stake: “We are all unemployed Congolese who have 
been abandoned by the state. We must find a way to survive and 
exploiting our natural resources is what we can do.” That is why his 
cooperative has been fighting over the last five years for the 
protection of the interests of artisanal miners and to modernise their 
work. This primarily means finding financial resources that will be used
 to introduce safer mining techniques. Ovoa explained: “We have to work 
without legal permits, without support by the state or any other 
organisations.” However, his members are all exorbitantly taxed by a 
growing number of governmental organisations. “It’s always about money 
they want from us.” 
 
All
 artisanal miners agree that the physical threats from militias are 
clearly in the past. “The military is in charge and does effectively 
protect the population,” said Ovoa. 
 
Gold
 traders who either act as independent buyers of artisanal gold or more 
often are agents of larger gold traders situated in Bunia, Butembo or 
Aru, are also tolerated by AGK – and extorted by government employees 
for whatever they are worth. Traders and merchants are well aware that 
they are targets of state agents and that they should maintain a quiet 
existence. One trader, who wished to stay anonymous, stated: “To 
government officials we are chakula yetu – our Swahili expression for ‘from where you eat’.” 
 
Although
 they trade gold produced by artisanal miners who lack proper permits, 
the traders are still required by the Ministry of Mines to buy permits 
at US$190 per year. Other agencies also raise money from the traders 
without giving any reasons for the tax. “What ANR is doing, is anyone’s 
guess,” said the trader, “as is true for others, such as DGI. Very 
often, they don’t give us any receipt for our payments. That’s our 
country.” 
 
Hubert
 Ngabu, another trader who works in the Mongbwalu area, blamed AGK: 
“They are putting artisanal miners under pressure and make only those 
zones available that have already been exploited.” This situation stands
 in stark contrast to what many miners and gold traders fondly recall as
 the belle époque before the war, when Kilo-Moto employed local residents, paid good salaries and constructed roads, hospitals and schools. 
 
Iga-Barrière
Iga-Barrière
 is situated midway between Bunia and Mongbwalu, at a crossroad that 
also leads to Fataki, Mahagi and Aru. This privileged geographic 
position has turned the formerly small mining site into an important 
trading hub for consumer goods, foodstuffs and gold. The chief of the 
Groupement estimates that 18,000 artisanal and small-scale gold miners 
are currently working in Iga-Barrière. They exploit tailings along the 
banks and in the Nizi River. Significant mining is also going on in the 
surrounding hillsides, which are exploited by small-scale mining 
operations, often involving several dozens of employees. 
 
A
 mini gold rush was recently triggered in Mbudu, a village to the 
northeast of Iga-Barriere, when a local resident was digging a septic 
tank and hit upon a very rich gold vein. In a short period of time, the 
entire village of farmers began digging in their backyards and fields 
and even ripped their houses apart. Not much is left of the original 
Mbudu except pits that indicate a major occurrence of artisanal 
gold-mining. 
 
Such
 mad rushes on their land may be explained by the extraordinary 
difficulties and confusions concerning property rights and access to 
gold deposits. “Who owns the land? OKIMO, SOKIMO or AGK?” asked 
Généreuse Lotsove, who works with a small-scale mining operation in 
Mbundu, “No representative told us anything about the future of this 
space.” 
 
Many
 suspect that the confusions and the pressures that SOKIMO exerts on the
 local communities with the help of ANR agents is designed to drive 
people off their land, which is considered a historic right by many 
Congolese. “On one site managers of SOKIMO frequently buy our gold 
because trading with artisanal gold is still their most important source
 of income,” explained Ngona Lossa, a catechist in one of the local 
villages. At the same time, many SOKIMO managers appear to take 
advantage of the miners to the point that they can barely survive. “They
 take the little that is left to the artisanal miners when in fact all 
we want is to use the land that belongs to Baluma, our ancestor.” 
 
Small-scale
 miner Richard Ngbemu explained: “In order to work a mine, one pays 30 
kitcheles of raw gold that is currently about US$1290.” After that there
 are quantities of sand with high gold content that are given to the 
police, soldiers, ANR, and other government and non-government 
employees. Tsala Dhekana, the mayor of Iga-Barriere and a contractor on 
mining sites, described the full picture of economic deprivations: “The 
price we have to pay for the rights to mine the land from SOKIMO is 
beyond our means and still we are required to pay and obtain the same 
rights from the traditional leader. Now, once we have the permit, the 
government services knock on our door to get what they consider their 
share. The demands by the local ANR intelligence agents are particularly
 odious. No local miner sees any benefits from their presence. There are
 a lot of misgivings about these so-called taxes, but we pay them in the
 hope that we will not be squeezed further.” 
 
For
 female miners, the economic pressures are particularly difficult. In 
many cases their husbands were killed during the wars and militia 
violence, they were displaced or they were otherwise separated from 
their men and families. Without any capital, there are very few 
opportunities for survival left for them. The relationship with the 
government agencies and the joint venture partners is crucial to their 
survival. “SOKIMO has always bothered us because they have never 
tolerated our presence unless we paid them,” explained Pascaline 
Ndjangusi, a female miner and stone collector working on the Sombe-Dimo 
mine, “But AGK is much worse – they have prohibited everything we do.” 
The exploitation of single women can take many other forms too. 
Généreuse Lotsove recalled how a policeman recently fined her for 
allegedly not respecting the traffic rules while she walked away from a 
gold buyer. “He knew that I had cash because I just sold a little bit of
 gold.” 
 
All
 miners report real improvements regarding the elimination of physical 
threats and attacks by militias or renegade FARDC forces. “We have no 
militias left in the region,” stated Issamba Jado, a farmer and 
part-time artisanal miner from Mbudu. “We have total peace; nobody has 
to fear for his life anymore. The security situation has improved to the
 point where our most serious problems are now with AGK.” Some miners 
have even pointed out that they rely on FARDC to protect their mines and
 gold when they transfer it to the buyer. A catechist, Dieudonné Bapu, 
confirmed that whatever precarious situations created by the joint 
venture partners might exist, the military has no part in it. “We are at
 peace with the soldiers who are here, they just do their work.” 
Virginie Love, who runs a little shop in Iga Centre pointed out that 
recourse for victims of violent crimes is now available: “The police 
will take violent crimes seriously and there is now also a special court
 for legal issues related to children.” 
 
Mabanga
In
 contrast to Iga-Barriere, Mabanga is far from the main roads that 
connect Bunia with Mongbwalu or with Mahagi-Aru. The road to Mabanga is 
in a deplorable state and even with a good 4-wheel-drive vehicle during 
the dry season it takes over one hour to navigate from the main road to 
Mabanga. During the rainy season Mabanga is often inaccessible. 
Notwithstanding these problems, the gold rush has attracted over 2000 
miners and their families, who have built makeshift houses near the 
three principal mining sites. 
 
Mabanga
 is part of the territory granted to AGK, but the joint venture partners
 have not initiated exploration drilling in the immediate vicinity. That
 does not mean that AGK – or maybe OKIMO – has not established a revenue
 sharing system with the local gold miners. “According to OKIMO’s rules 
we are supposed to pay 30 percent of our gold sand, but on average we 
end up paying 40 percent of our revenues because that’s how much they 
take from our excavated sand,” explained Gratien Ndahora, a local miner.
 “It is an abusive system because on top of these payments, agents from 
ANR, representatives of the Ministry for the Environment and even the 
FEC are demanding a share of our gold.” 
 
The
 relationship with the military, on the other hand, brings practical and
 positive benefits to the miners. In Mabanga, gold is mined in open-pit 
mines. Substantial amounts of sand, all with a high content of gold, are
 dug up and stored until the crew can start to wash out and divide the 
gold. “Storing so much valuable sand is risky,” explained Philippe 
Lokana, a sub-contractor in charge of a mine in Dimo. “It can be stolen,
 or even our workers may start to wash it out prematurely.” To prevent 
theft, most miners rely on the military to guard the gold sand deposits 
day and night, seven days a week. The fee for the soldiers is 
customarily around 10 percent of the production, which is considered a 
good investment by most miners. “Their presence on our site has 
absolutely no negative impact on our work or the security of our 
families,” assured Lokana, “because they leave once their work is done.” 
 
Mining
 sites in the two territories of Bondo and Banalia are very isolated and
 only connected by poor roads to the southeast where the next trading 
centre is in Kisangani, 600 km away. Baye and Seminor are the principal 
gold-mining sites in Bondo, while Panga and Mangi are the centres in 
Banalia. Some industrialised gold exploitation began in this area during
 the colonial period, but the Belgian installation quickly fell into 
disrepair after independence. The current, informal artisanal mining 
started in the early 1980s as part of the Zairianisation of the mining 
industry. 
 
Over
 ten thousand artisanal miners have been drawn to these remote regions. 
In the minds of the gold miners, the record prices quoted on world gold 
markets make it practical to travel these distances and endure the 
hardships. Government services and oversight functions have not kept 
pace with the massive influx of artisanal miners. Although SAESSCAM has 
deployed 150 agents to all areas of the province, not all of them are 
formally under contract and most of them see monthly salary payments 
only a few times per year. On the rare occasions when salaries are paid,
 even senior agents receive a mere US$30 per month. 
 
The
 deplorable state of government oversight extends to CEEC, an agency 
that generally tends to be proactive. According to the head of the 
Kisangani bureau of CEEC, none of the gold exporting firms that operate 
in Kisangani have requested legal licenses to do business. The entire 
output from the artisanal miners is therefore leaving the country 
illegally and without having been properly taxed. 
 
The
 unpaid agents responsible for the oversight and law enforcement of the 
province have turned into hungry predators, who regularly descend upon 
the artisanal mining camps with fictitious orders and payment demands. 
“The glaring contradictions in their so-called taxation systems and the 
multiplicity of government services do not keep the officials from 
proceeding with whatever they want on any given day,” said a miner from 
Buta by the name of Bruno Masebu Ngboyo. “SAESSCAM agents are not 
bothering to help and instruct artisanal miners. They are just here to 
ask us for money – often without giving us any receipt.” 
 
According
 to the miners, even the government agent’s thievery is not organised 
properly. “They charge us an exorbitant US$25 for an artisanal mining 
permit,” stated Ismaël Marmalaba, a miner from Baye, “but frequently 
they are out of forms.” Artisanal miners are supposed to pay anyway. 
Miners who wish to obtain evidence for their payment receive no help. 
For Marmalaba the conclusion is inevitable: “There is nothing legal 
here.” Another miner, Jean Ngbangbo agreed: “We are abandoned by the 
state and no laws protect us.” The lawlessness extends deep into the 
working lives of each miner, as Ngbangbo and Marmalaba explained: “As 
soon as we start to find gold in a newly dug mine, a local administrator
 may show up on behalf of the landowners to chase us off.” 
 
The
 miners also have to consider that the Disciplinary Brigade is sent 
against them. These are poorly trained police officers who tend to 
create a lot of problems. FARDC soldiers and normal police can cause 
even more serious security problems. Bruno Masebu Ngboyo told SARW: “The
 soldiers are not permanently deployed to our mining sites. But every 
time they show up, they start to loot and pillage our camps and if we 
object, their answer is arbitrary arrests. This is always a time of 
terror for our families.” 
 
One miner stated laconically: “This is the law of the jungle.” 
 
 
Gold mining in South Kivu Province 
The
 second richest gold deposit in the DRC, the Twangiza Namoya gold belt 
that cuts across South Kivu from east to west, is also one of the spaces
 where the nexus of conflict and gold has a particularly long history. 
Armed groups operated from the Itombe Range during 25 years of perpetual
 rebellion against Mobuto. It is also the original refuge of the 
Banyamulenge, who were one of the catalysts for the Congolese wars. This
 is the first region that is on the verge of moving from many years of 
informal gold-mining into industrial production. In October 2011, the 
Canadian-managed Banro Corporation started to produce gold at its 
Twangiza mining site. Other sites around Lugushwa and Kamituga are now 
under development and will commence production in the coming years. 
Industrial gold production is expected to bring additional revenues to 
the people of South Kivu. 
 
There
 are many secondary gold-mining sites in addition to rich deposits of 
cassiterite, coltan, wolframite, silver, copper, cobalt and other 
minerals. Most of these deposits (including the gold now being mined by 
Banro) used to be part of the vast Belgian-Zairian conglomerate SOMINKI.
 During Mobutu’s Zairianisation of the mining sector, the industrial 
installations were abandoned and exploitation of the region’s assets 
reverted back to artisanal and small-scale operations. 
 
Historically,
 South Kivu has spawned a diversity of armed groups. Together with North
 Kivu, the province is dotted with surviving units of FDLR and 
Mayi-Mayi. In recent years, Hutus who banded together in FDLR units have
 come under attack in successive military operations, starting with 
‘Umoja Wetu’ in 2009, a joint Congo-Rwanda military offensive, and 
‘Kimia II’ that was assisted by MONUC. While the FDLR are now fractured 
and decimated, they are still a destabilising factor as the last major 
confrontation in Shabunda province (November-December 2011) 
demonstrated. And roaming FDLR bands still threaten gold-mining 
communities, as SARW learned in interviews with artisanal gold miners in
 Kalehe. 
 
Mwenga/ Walungu 
 
 
The
 historically prominent gold-mining centres of Kamituga and Lugushwa and
 many other sites in the Walungu and Mwenga Territories tap into the 
Twangiza-Namoya gold belt. In the past, these sites were mined 
industrially by SOMINKI. The Banro operations in Twangiza and at Namoya 
to the west in Maniema Province are expected to yield 240,000 oz of gold
 per year. The expected revenue will fund expansion costs at the Banro 
sites in Kamituga and Lugushwa. The required investments will infuse 
hundreds of millions of dollars into the regional economy in the form of
 direct taxes, dividends, as well as indirectly through the commission 
of various works, acquisitions and salaries. 
 
While
 the mid-term prospects for the region are positive, the short-term 
prospects are dominated by widespread fear of the consequences that the 
transition from informal to formal gold production will have of local 
communities. Misinformation and rumours abound that Banro will displace 
entire villages and deprive the Congolese of their traditional right to 
benefit from their land’s gold riches. Any white visitor to the region 
is normally mistaken as an emissary of Banro, and will be viewed with a 
great deal of suspicion. The assumption is that Banro will gradually 
displace the entire artisanal and small-scale population within its 
extensive concessions. “All of Kamituga is part of the Banro concession 
territory,” explained Mukupi Bulambo, a miner on the Isomisa gold mining
 site. “There is no mechanism to guide us to free mining sites, or 
information available about alternative artisanal mining zones. Instead 
of helping us, the government just blocks the issuance of artisanal 
mining permits.” Another local miner, Mulmabi Karubandika, is very aware
 of how exposed they are to Banro’s decisions. “Everything can change 
from one moment to another. We do not know our rights. We do not know 
the precise boundaries of the Banro concession land.” Bulambo and many 
of his colleagues fear that any day Banro will arrive and shut them all 
down. “From time to time a Banro representative comes to reassure us 
that they are not ready to work in our area,” said Bulambo. While that 
is helpful, the miners still fear the inevitable day when Banro will 
change its plan. “It will be a great tragedy because we will not be 
prepared for that day,” added Bulmabo. 
 
To
 some extent these fears are offset by Banro Foundation’s efforts, 
including the building of roads, the Mulambi Mission medical facility 
north of Twangiza, the Kibiswa primary school near Namoya (on the South 
Kivu side of the border with Maniema) and the Makalanga Women’s Resource
 Centre in Lugushwa. The company also provides water-supply remediation,
 supplies latrines to hospitals, builds sports facilities, rebuilds 
churches, and sponsors an array of local and regional activities – 
social contributions that are required of any mining company by national
 laws. But Banro has missed important opportunities to make these 
contributions better known in the wider region by publishing reports 
about its plans and efforts not only in French but also in Swahili. 
According to its most recent release, Banro currently has 634 skilled 
employees of whom 558 are Congolese. Another 2,600 Congolese are 
directly or indirectly employed in the construction phases of the 
various projects that the company is undertaking in South Kivu and 
Maniema. 
 
With
 or without Banro, the backbone of the local economy is mining. “At 
least 80 percent of the population of the Kamituga area depends on 
income from mining,” estimated Messe Wangalusu, manager of a small-scale
 gold-mining operation at the Kabatongo site. The remaining 20 percent 
of the population indirectly depend on mining since they are the traders
 who supply the communities. 
 
With
 the new regulation issued by the Ministry of Mines that forces all 
artisanal miners to organise themselves into cooperatives, the economic 
dynamics have changed for the worse. “Rather than represent and protect 
our interests, we now find that our cooperatives are just another cost 
factor that has to be borne by the miners,” explained Messe Wangalusu. 
“These escalating financial pressures will swallow us up.” The rising 
cost of living is taking a heavy toll on the wallets of miners. “To put 
food on the table for my family of five, I pay at least US$10 per day. 
Everything we buy here has to be brought in from Bukavu – for which we 
pay. And because the roads are in a very bad state, we are forced to pay
 an extra price on top of the already higher costs for all the goods and
 foodstuffs.” 
 
Everyone
 interviewed throughout the entire artisanal mining structure, including
 the small gold traders and the local associations representing miners 
and traders, agrees that ongoing harassment and extortions by government
 officials is the most challenging and threatening problem. Lehopa 
Butumani, who is a miner in the G7 mine and has been working since the 
age of 14 without a proper artisanal mining permit, summarised the 
problems of working as a gold miner: “Administrative harassments by the 
military, the traditional leaders and the police; lack of assistance and
 tools, and starvation.” 
 
According
 to all interviewed miners, government functionaries sometimes collect 
the legitimate fees for the artisanal mining permit. However, it is much
 more likely that the same administrators – together with soldiers and 
officers, traditional leaders and policemen – will extort numerous 
additional payments. Regardless of whether the fees, taxes or levies 
raised against them are legitimate, the miners and traders are left with
 little or nothing in net earnings. Despite their contribution as one of
 the most significant regional wealth providers, the artisanal and 
small-scale miners receive no services from the government in return. 
“SAESSCAM agents only show up to collect our money,” said one miner. 
Lehopa Butumani illustrated the point: “If one of us requires hospital 
care, we have to carry the patient 50km from Lugushwa to Kitutu over a 
horrendous road that turns into a metre-deep mud river during the rainy 
season. With a motorbike the trip costs US$20-US$30.” 
 
Itongwa,
 who is the manager of a mining cooperative, explained: “The mining 
police come here only if somebody hasn’t paid the taxes. In that case 
they shut down the mine.” Until the penalised miners pay a US$50 fine 
they are not allowed to resume mining. Thierry Babingwa, president of 
the mining cooperatives of Mwenga Territory, complained: “The Mining 
Division has found a new twist by charging for the application form and 
for the actual artisanal mining permit.” In his opinion, SAESSCAM has 
completely confused its mission. “Instead of providing training and 
education to artisanal miners, they see themselves exclusively as a tax 
collection authority.” 
 
Claude
 Maliza, an artisanal miner from Birhala, explained how combatants 
frequently visit the mines. “It used to be just FDLR rebels but they 
have been pushed out. On the rare occasions when they still come by, 
they are disguised in civilian clothes. Units of the FARDC are now in 
control, and they show up frequently to collect ‘little presents’. 
Whenever FARDC units appear, we have a little panic sweeping the mine,” 
said Itongwa. “We represent such attractive looting opportunities that 
if their superiors order them to be transferred, they will fight those 
orders and simply stay.” Butumani explained: “The soldiers are clearly 
interested in nothing else but gold. We never see them during the time 
we develop a mine or during the rainy season when most of our mining 
sites are flooded and we are unable to work.” 
 
“When
 the mines are ready for production, FARDC units will immediately be 
present. They either enforce a fictitious reason to close the mine so 
that they can take over the operation themselves, or they force us to 
give them a certain amount of stone. Frequently, they will crush the 
stones and wash out the gold themselves. We have, for example, First 
Lieutenant Guilan of the 14th Brigade who works in the Tobola mines 
outside Kamituga. He not only runs his own mine, he also acts as 
financier for other mining sites and is trading gold on his own 
account,” explained Thierry Babingwa. 
 
Another
 president of a regional mining cooperative said: “Every Saturday, the 
FARDC who are based in Butuza extract from all miners in the surrounding
 areas the gold ore that they produce during two hours of work.” Even if
 the police and military try to hide their true intentions, the legal 
adviser to the artisanal miners who are members of the G7-Cooperative 
knows that the miners are subject to extortion: “They come into the mine
 to look for trouble and to shut down the entire mine. Unless we pay 
hefty fines, they will not allow us to go back to work.” 
 
In
 addition to raw gold or untreated gold ores, many mining communities 
are regularly asked to contribute food rations of manioc, beans or sweet
 potatoes to FARDC soldiers. 
 
A
 secondary area where the gold industry is subject to extortion is the 
road to the nearby trading centres of Uvira and Bukavu. “There are 
always armed men out looking for somebody to rob,” explained Songa 
Iluba, the chief of the local gold traders association. “They are 
usually in civilian clothes to make us think that they belong to the 
FDLR.” Even if they are FDLR, it does not matter. Iluba further 
explained: “The thievery usually takes place in plain sight of an FARDC 
checkpoint. Our national military forces never intervene.” 
 
In
 addition to the extortions and grotesque over-taxations, the gold 
miners of Walungu and Mwenga are also often forced to pay highly 
exaggerated retail prices. “We spend only 20 percent of our time 
farming,” stated one indigenous miner. No one pursues farming anymore – 
the traditional source of income in this part of South Kivu. Degradation
 due to over-cultivation of the once fertile soil and an increase in 
pests, such as cassava mosaic, brown streak and many other parasites, 
have had deleterious effects on the economy of South Kivu. Now, the 
majority of the food consumed in the mining areas is imported and bought
 at a steep premium by the miners. 
 
Kalehe 
Kalehe
 is nestled at the point on the road from Bukavu where it forks 
northwest to Walikale and northeast to Goma. Despite its strategic 
location, Kalehe has been traditionally cut off from formalised mining. 
The region is rich in cassiterite, coltan, wolframite, tantalum, niobium
 and gold, and since 2008 has attracted foreign investments. The largest
 holder of exploration permits is the Canadian company, Shamika 
Resources, which – under its local subsidiary Shamika Congo Kalehe – 
controls wide-ranging permits in Kalehe and on neighbouring Idjwi 
island. Shamika has released no information about its financing, or when
 and where it intends to commence an exploration programme, and any 
production seems to be far off in the future. 
 
Kalehe’s
 relative isolation is one of the main reasons why the industrialisation
 of the region has been so slow, particularly as its isolation and the 
nearby Kahuzi-Biega National Park make the area an ideal resupply base 
for FDLR and Mayi-Mayi groups. Several times in recent years, the UN 
Group of Experts has reported on how sections of Kalehe were dominated 
or controlled by FDLR, PARECO, and FARDC units entirely composed of 
former CNDP combatants. In 2009, the Group also reported how FARDC 
Colonel Zimurinda controlled many mines in Kalehe, and how his officers 
were once intercepted transporting 1500 kilograms of wolframite to a 
trading house in Goma. There is no known follow-up by the government in 
this case. 
 
Debra
 Basomi Charangabo, an artisanal miner explained: “Our site is not far 
from the forest where FDLR are sometimes camped. From time to time, they
 come by to loot, pillage and inflict other abuses on us”. Despite the 
ongoing presence of militias and criminal groups, many artisanal miners 
stated that they were not being disturbed. On the other hand, they 
complained of being forced to make regular payments to FARDC soldiers 
and provide weekly ‘military rations’ as well as suffering occasional 
looting sprees by militias. Somehow, artisanal miners in Kalehe have 
come to accept these abuses and extortions as an unavoidable part of 
life. Banga, an artisanal miner who is part of the Cominya cooperative, 
said: “The soldiers regularly impose ‘community service’ on all miners.”
 However, Patrick Ameli, a member of the artisanal mining cooperative 
Nyawaronga, pointed out: “Actually, the soldiers do not disturb us much 
and for the 500 FC we pay weekly they are the only ones who can 
intervene in conflict situations, or where we can obtain some justice.” 
 
In
 Kahale too, the so-called fees, taxes and levies that are imposed by a 
swarm of government officials take on absurd dimensions. According to 
several members of the Cominya cooperative, the weekly fee for the FARDC
 is 500 FC per miner, US$22 for one artisanal miner card, US$4 for an 
identification card, another US$10 per month and per mine for each miner
 plus US$10 for the SAESSCAM identification document. “Finally, we are 
also paying US$5 per week to the president of our cooperative.” Bahati 
Bosco, one of the local miners is under no illusion about the real 
purpose of these taxes: “They only come here to get our money.” 
 
Of
 all the artisanal miners interviewed in Kalehe not a single one could 
identify a positive service or useful contribution by government agents.
 “We don’t have too many difficulties obtaining our permits and 
artisanal miner permits,” stated Ameli “except that we often have to 
search long and hard to find gold in order to pay for it.” 
 
The
 prevalent view among the mining communities is that the living and 
working conditions are ‘deplorable’. Fina Mucweru and Chalonza 
Natkucheba, two women who operate small trading posts, explained: “We 
have no health centre, no school, and the roads are so bad that our 
goods can only be transported to and from Bukavu by motorbike.” Lack of 
services and rule of law in their community has resulted in complex land
 disputes and a direct threat to their survival. The land for which the 
chief of the camp obtained a mining permit actually belongs to a local 
farmer. Lwaga Macine, one of the miners, stated: “The landowner wants to
 raise crops in the surrounding fields and is not allowing our women to 
farm for our own needs. This jeopardises our survival.” 
 
Ameli
 pointed out that there are no police stationed near their site with 
currently over 200 miners at work. Felix Wazekwa Zihalirwa, the chief of
 the camp, explained that the lack of security even extends to 
transportation. Neither motorbikes nor bicycles can be used, forcing 
miners and traders to walk six hours to sell their gold in town or to 
bring food and supplies to the mining sites. Zihalirwa said: “That 
exposes us and our traders to high risks of being robbed.” 
 
Fizi 
The
 hinterlands of Fizi, extending along Lake Tanganyika to Baraka and to 
the northwest towards Mwenga, and then along the adjacent Itombe 
mountain range and the Minembwe plateau, are rich in gold deposits. The 
plateau is the homeland of the Banyamulenge people, an ethnic group 
deeply embroiled in the Congo wars. As a leading member of the People’s 
Revolutionary Party, former President Laurent-Désiré Kabila lived and 
operated from Fizi for many years. As the leader of the Alliance des 
Forces Démocratiques pour la Libération du Congo-Zaïre, he staged the 
successful overthrow of Mobuto from this region. 
 
Until
 very recently, rebel activities have prevented industrial mining. 
However, over the past five years this has been reversed and companies 
are showing strong interest in acquiring mining permits. 
TransAfrikaResources had secured permits for the largest tracts of land 
for mining exploration, brought in drilling equipment and advanced 
rapidly towards production. However, the UN Group of Experts recently 
reported that the founder and operations manager of TransAfrikaResources
 might have a relationship with the FRF, a Banyamulenge-dominated rebel 
group. The manager, Thomas Nziratimana, was formerly a Vice-Governor of 
South Kivu and a RCD functionary. According to the UN, the FRF receives 
logistical and general support from Banyamulenge communities in return 
for protection. It was also discovered that the FRF raised taxes from 
local markets and gold traders. These UN allegations were serious enough
 to cause TransAfrikaResources to abandon its work in South Kivu. 
 
Another
 concession encompasses Makenda mine, a traditional artisanal and 
small-scale mining site. According to CAMI records, Kashama Muteba holds
 an exploration permit together with 38 additional licenses throughout 
the DRC. They were all granted on 22 January 2007. Kashama Muteba 
appears to be Ferdinand Kashama Muteba, the President of the UDPS 
chapter in Ontario, Canada. SARW researchers did not detect any sign of 
activity on this property, leaving the entire gold-rich region once 
again to artisanal gold miners. 
 
Leda
 Mining, a company that appears to be a subsidiary of Anvil Mining, owns
 large concessions to the South of Fizi. Leda sold 75 percent of its 
rights to a property located southwest of Fizi in Misisi to a junior 
gold exploration company called Casa Mining, which has also acquired 
gold exploration rights in Maniema and Katanga. The company has 
commenced a drilling programme on its Misisi property, but it will be a 
number of years before any industrial gold production is likely in this 
location. Nevertheless, rumours have already made some local gold miners
 and traders nervous. “If the company begins operations, all traders 
will be unemployed as we depend on our business of buying gold,” said 
Safari Kazinguvu, the secretary of ANEMISA, the gold traders association
 in Misisi. “We are not for the industrialisation of this region.” 
 
Of
 concern is the widespread presence of FARDC soldiers who engage in 
every aspect of gold-mining. “Whenever a mine shows promising gold 
veins, the FARDC soldiers and officers and the ANR and National Police 
make us work a certain amount of hours for them,” said Mwanza Assumani, a
 miner and member of a cooperative in Kimbi. “The commanders of the 
FARDC 10th Military Region have stone-crushers working for them on a 
permanent basis – they have no choice.” 
 
Instabilities
 caused by the presence of Mayi-Mayi Yakutumba, FDLR, FRF and the forces
 of the FARDC 112th Brigade (which integrated former FRF combatants) 
have only recently abated. Once again, the ongoing presence of FARDC 
soldiers continues to impose heavy penalties on artisanal communities. 
Justin Bitombo, who works in the artisanal gold mine in Misisi, 
described the relationship with the FARDC stationed in his region: “Most
 of the time they are ok with us. But it is dangerous. The situation can
 change at any moment as we saw during the military operation Kimia II. 
They came frequently into our villages and mining camps to loot, pillage
 and to take our women.” 
 
Under
 closer questioning, Bitombo admitted that he was subjected to many 
different abuses, including daily extortion for money or food. “They ask
 us to work for them for two hours, but then they force us to go on for 
two days. And in the neighbouring Miba mine soldiers frequently work 
there but they force the locals to wash their sand for free.” With small
 bands of FDLR and Mayi-Mayi roaming the area, most miners around Misisi
 are more than willing to accept the transgressions of FARDC soldiers, 
since their presence is a security-enhancing factor. 
 
To
 avoid extortion by renegade soldiers – mostly imposed on traders who 
buy raw gold from the mining sites and transfer it to Fizi – the 
administrator of the territory has ordered all gold ore to be crushed in
 Fizi. However, these types of measures just shift the cost around. 
Raphael Bofoya Limwawa, a member of Comiki, a cooperative in Misisi, 
stated: “Transporting the stones to the stone-crushers in the centre of 
Fizi increases transportation costs enormously – that we pay.” 
 
The
 exorbitant payments to the military still do not protect the 
cooperative against illegal coercions. Comiki’s chief has to pay 
SAESSCAM 300,000 FC per month. Artisanal miners who are not part of the 
cooperative but would like to work in the same mining site have to pay 
50,000 FC per month. “The traditional leaders of the land where we work 
demand payments as well, usually in collaboration with ANR agents, the 
officials of the Provincial Mining Division and the mining police,” said
 Limwawa. 
 
When
 President Kabila imposed a six-month suspension on all mining 
activities, the officers of the 112th and 113th Regiments did not 
enforce it but took advantage of it. “Each stone-crusher was required to
 pay each week in order to be permitted to work,” explained Mwanza 
Assumani, a miner and member of a local cooperative. The approximately 
200 stone-crushers who work at the Miba mining site ended up paying 1 
million FC just to secure the military’s permission to continue to work.
 After they were allowed back into the mine, they were still forced to 
pay 15,000-20,000 FC per day. 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Gold deposits in Congo (Kinshasa) (Source: Southern African Development Community, Mineral Resources Survey Programme No 4, 2001)  
The Democratic 
Republic of Congo remains one of the world's great undeveloped resources
 of mineral wealth. Despite limited exploration, it is known to be rich 
in copper, cobalt, zinc, gold and diamonds, and it could have been one 
of the stronger economies of Africa if it had not had such major 
political problems. Up to the early 1960s gold production was 8 000 kg a
 year (Ruffini, 1997). Most of the gold production came from deposits 
in greenstone belts of northem DRC, close to the borders to Uganda and 
Sudan (a legend which still lives on in the Democratic Republic of Congo
 places the gold mines of King Solomon in this area) and from the Kivu 
Province in eastern DRC.  
The country was
 known as the Belgian Congo until it became independent in  1960 as  the
 Republic of  the Congo. In 1964 it became the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo. Its name was changed in 1971 to Zaire by President Mobuto 
Sese Seko. A rebellion in 1997 saw the toppling of President Mobutu and 
carried Laurent Desire Kabila to power and the country reverted to the 
Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC). 
The new 
government was initially reasonably well received by the mining 
community, and interest from foreign companies would be on the increase 
if it were not for the ongoing civil war. The country's new Minister of 
Mines believes that official production of 6 000 kg a year could be 
achieved and hopes the country will take its place as one of Africa's 
major gold producers (Ruffini, 1997). 
| Year | Production | Unit of Measure | % Change |  
| 2002 | 7600 | Kilograms | NA |  
| 2003 | 4100 | Kilograms | -46.05 % |  
| 2004 | 5700 | Kilograms | 39.02 % |  
| 2005 | 7200 | Kilograms | 26.32 % |  
| 2006 | 10300 | Kilograms | 43.06 % |  
| 2007 | 5100 | Kilograms | -50.49 % |  
| 2008 | 3300 | Kilograms | -35.29 % |  
| 2009 | 2000 | Kilograms | -39.39 % |  
 
 
Source:USGS
 
 
 
Northern DRC 
  
Gold production in northern DRC began in 1904. Total recorded output from the region amounts
to 350 t. 
 
Stratigraphy and general geology 
 
The entire gold production of northern DRC comes from
schists and greenstone belts located
either within the Bomu
amphibolite and gneiss
Complex, or within the Upper Zaire granitiod
Massif' where the greenstone terranes are referred to as the Ganguan and the Kibalian respectively. The Upper Zaire granitiod
Massif constitutes, together
with associated metasediments and vol
canics, the western part of the Nyanza-K.ibali granite greenstone   terrane, which   extends 
 from 
 northern Tanzania  into  the  Central 
 African 
 Republic.   The  Kibalian greenstone
terrane is more important from an
economic point of view (it hosts the Kilo and Moto Greenstone Belts which are the largest
gold producers in 
 
the Democratic Republic
of Congo) and crops out in numerous zones surrounded by granitoids.(The
 Moto greenstone belt, north-eastern Congo, which consists of Archaean 
rocks of the Lower Kibalian System host the important gold 
mineralization. The Moto greenstone belt is bounded to the north by the 
Archaean West Nile Gneiss complex and to the south by the (younger) 
Upper Zaire granitic complex. 
 
 
 
The
 Twangiza-Namoya gold belt, eastern Congo, is located in Proterozoic and
 Archean age rocks in the northern half of the Great Lakes 
sub-province.) 
 
 
 
The gold is hosted either
in quartz veins emplaced within shear zones cutting across greenstones or tonalite, or in impregnations along foliation planes
(Lavreau, 1984). The process
which concentrated the gold
into the veins or
foliation planes was accompanied by profound wallrock
alteration, mainly carbonatisation. The alteration took place during greenschist-facies metamorphism. 
 
Kilo Greenstone Belt 
  
Alluvial gold was discovered in the Kilo area in 1903, and
shortly thereafter high-grade gold quartz veins were
discovered.
Gold has been recovered intermittently from the Kilo mines since the early 1900s, with ore grades of about 15,5 g/t Au having been obtained. Reported cumu lative production to date has been 466-622  kg of gold (Elevatorski, 1995). The rich gold-quartz veins occur in faulted and sheared zones of chloritic
schist and amphi bolite. Generally
the veins are about 2 m thick, subverti
cal and concordant with the foliation
of the country rocks. In some areas the veins have been folded
and refolded, resulting in saddle reefs. Pyrite,
pyrrhotite and magnetite are abundant accessory
minerals. In addition
to quartz-vein mining, some gold has been reco-vered
from eluvial deposits
and also from disseminated gold in wall-rock impregnations 
 
 
Isuru, Kanga 
  
About half of the lode
production from the Kilo District
has  come  from  the
Isuru  and  Kanga  deposits  located about 25 km northwest of Kilo. These deposits produced
a total of some 40 t of gold. Quartz veins and lenses are disposed in an en echelon
pattern along mylonitised zones (Lavreau, 1984). The host rocks at Isuru are ferruginous grits. The country rocks
at Kanga are quartz-diorite and coarse-grained tonalite,
intrusive in greenstones. 
  
Nzebi 
  
Of the two deposits  mined,
the· one is situated  within chlorite-talc schist, while the other
one occurs within coarse-grained
 tonalites.
 It has
 not
 been
 established whether   the  same  shear 
 structure   created 
 the  two deposits or not. Vertical faulting is a common feature in the  region.  The  gold  grades  of  these  two  deposits
 is about 10 g/t Au (Lavreau,
1984). 
  
Senzere Mine 
  
The
Senzere Mine is located approximately 5 km south east of the Nzebi deposit. En echelon quartz
veins were mined from shear
zones within strongly foliated
chlorite actinolite-talc schist. The ore grade was about 9,3 g/t Au. 
  
Tsele 
  
At Tsele a quartz
vein, 1 m thick in a mafic host rock, was
mined. The ore graded between 2-25 g/t Au with average gold grade of 10 g/t (Lavreau, 1984). 
  
Yedi 
  
Quartz veins in fine-grained, non-schistose amphibolite were mined at Yedi, 40
km northwest of Kilo. No further information is avalaible. 
  
Camp Ill 
  
At
Camp III a single vein, 0,5-2 m thick,
has yielded 20
g/t Au. Host rocks are andesitic. No further information is avalaible. 
  
Moto Greenstone Belt 
  
Exploitation of auriferous  placers began
in 1911. Subsequently production also came
from lodes discovered in this area.
Unlike the Kilo mines, most of the production has come from wall-rock impregnations (Elevatorski,
 1995). Host rocks are iron-stained
 schist and
amphibolite similar to those at the Kilo mines; however,
there is a paucity of diabase dykes. Gangue minerals include
albite, quartz and carbonates, with subordinate  sericite,  iron,  chlorite  and  epidote.
 Ores
 contain pyrite, pyrrhotite and magnetite. 
  
About 15 km east of Moto is the ore body of Agbarabo
which is cylindrical in shape about 20 m in diameter
and has been exploited to a length
of 300 m. It dips to the north-northeast, parallel to the foliation  of the country rocks. Enriched shoots are encountered within
the main body, or near it. The host rocks are sericitised and albitised schist. Most of the established 20-t gold reserve has been mined out (Lavreau, 1984). 
 
The Gorumbwa Mine,
about 9 km south of the Agbarabo
Mine, had a high-grade tabular ore body, 120m wide
at the surface (reducing to 55 m at 30m below surface) and about
10 m thick, dipping at 24 to the north-northeast.
The gold grade of the mined ore was 15 g/t Au. Host rocks  are  carbonate-albite-quartz  schist  (Elevatorski,1995). Silver and copper sulphides
are abundant. Most of the 40-t gold reserve
has been mined out (Lavreau,
1984). 
 
The
quartz vein mined at this deposit was emplaced into amphIbolites. It had
a strike length of 300 m and a depth extent of 60
m. The average thickness of the vein was about  1 m. Total
recorded  production  was 491  kg  of gold, with an average
grade of about 6 g/t Au (Lavreau, 
 
1984). Exploitation had to be abandoned as a
result of excessive water infiltration. 
 
The  Ngayu  Greenstone  Belt  is  located
 approximately 240  km southwest  of the Moto 
Greenstone  Belt.
It is unknown when gold was first discovered here. 
 
A  swarm  of  parallel  quartz  veins
 gives
 rise
 to
 the Kitenge  and  Adumbi
 inselbergs.
Some twenty veins have been worked in this area, with two of them yielding most of the 5 t
of gold produced by the two mines (Lavreau,
 1984). The veins are a few centimetres
 thick and
are disposed in an en echelon way, slightly oblique to the elongation of the hills. Gold content
was remarkably constant at around 10 g/t. A report for Adumbi by the Bureau de Recherches
Geologiques et Minieres, indicated potential
for downdip extensions
of the ore body to host up to 1,9 Mt of ore at an average grade of 10 g/t Au (Ruffini, 1997). 
 
At
Yindi, about 1 407 kg of gold have been recovered from a vein field
in which more than 1 400 veins
have been recorded
(Lavreau, 1984), but only twenty of them have been exploited. Their individual
 thicknessess
 are less than 1 m and their gold content varies between 1 and 344 g/t, with an average
of 3,6 g/t. Only 70 per cent of the gold was recovered because
of the abundance of sulfides and the refractory nature of the ore. The vein field of Yindi is hosted within metavolcanics and ferruginous grits. Veins and veinlets are parallel to the apparent bedding. The  lengths  of  the  veins
 are
 considerable
 (one being
 1
 300
 m
 in
 length)
 and
 their
 thickness
 varies between 0 and 200 cm. At
Angukuluku a small but similar
vein field has yield ed 170 kg of gold. The bedding,
marked by ferruginous
grits, is cut at the fold hinges,
indicating  that
the veins were emplaced parallel
to the regional foliation 
 
Kivu Province 
  
Both alluvial
and lode gold operations have yielded gold from
 this
 Province
 in
 the
 eastern
 DRC.
 One
 of
 the recently active operations in this area was the Lugushwa placers, located about 80 km southwest
of Kamituga. 
  
Lugushwa 
Ownership in 2001:    Banro
Resource Corporation 93 per cent, Government
 of the Democratic
 Republic of
Congo 7 per cent Alluvial mining has accounted  for all the gold production
to date from Lugushwa, located
about 45 km south west  of  Kamituga.. Mineralised   zones  are  contained
within  what  appears  to  be  a  synclinal
 structure.
As recently as 1996, gold was extracted
by a primitive alluvial operation,
 with reported  production  at 62.,20 kg a year.Total identified   resources   are  933  kg  (Banro Resource Corporation, 1998). Regional geology comprises mica schist with intercalated greenstone and
quartzite, and intrusive granite with quartz
 veins
 and
 quartz
 stockworks   in.  shear zones
(Ruffini, 1998c). The gold within the
veins and stock works often grades between 30 and 100 g/t. The adjacent schists tend to carry disseminated low grades of between 1
and 4 g/t Au. During a soil-sampling programme conducted
by Banro, a number of near-surface hard-rock deposits were discovered and subsequently trenched, drilled and tested with adits. Two near-surface
deposits include 3 Mt of ore grading
4,5 g/t Au and 2,5 Mt of ore grading
4 g/t Au (Ruffini, 1998c). There is
significant potential  to  increase  the  reserves  in  depth  and  along strike. 
 
  
Mobale (Kamituga) 
Ownership:in 2001    Banro
Resource Corporation 93 per cent Government
 of the Democratic
 Republic of
Congo 7 per cent The Mobale Mine was, until the recent civil war leading to the change in government, a producing mine which had recovered over 24 t of gold since 1923. Production initially  came
 from
 underground
 workings
 accessed
 by
 a decline shaft and, in the 1950s, two high-grade open pits were
developed. Oxidised ore at a cut-off grade
of 3 g/t Au was mined from the
open pits until the 1960s. The pits were developed to a depth of 40 m.
A review of historical work has indicated a potential yield of 15,5 t of gold from the open pits, at a grade of between 1,5 and 2,5 g/t Au. Prior to the mine being flooded
in 1997, gold production came solely from the underground operation
where min ing during its last four years averaged
30 000 t/y of ore at a grade of 9,9 g/t Au (Ruffini,  1998c).  Mining
 has taken
place to a depth
of250
m below suface.
Auriferous quartz veins occur in biotite schist. The ore minerals comprise  arsenopyrite, pyrite,  chalcopyrite and pyrrhotite, with minor amounts
of galena, sphalerite, bis muthinite and aurostibite. 
 
Namoya 
  
Ownership in 2001:    Banro
Resource Corporation  93 per cent Government  of the Democratic  Republic of
Congo 7 per cent 
 
Alluvial gold was first discovered
 in 1931 and produc
tion from alluvial
operations continued through
to 1947. Primary gold mineralisation  on Mount  Mwendamboko
was discovered in the early 1950s and primary gold min ing
commenced  from
an open pit in 1951. It is estima ted that about 4 t of gold were recovered
 from
 quartz veins grading 10 g/t (Ruffini, 1998c)
before civil distur bance, resulting  from the Democratic Republic  of Congo's
 newly achieved
independence from Belgium
in  1960, led to the closure
of the mines. All the deposits
 so far discovered
 by Banro  are developed in quartz-vein stockworks within shear
zones. Host rocks  are  folded  chlorite-sericite   schist  and  quartzite.
Gold occurs in quartz veinlets
and also as inclusions in arsenopyrite
 and pyrite
(Elevatorski,  1995).  According to Banro  Resource  Corporation's independent
 consultant,
this zone has mineable reserves
totalling 11,2 t Au. Although in the 1950s low-grade
targets were not economical,
the use of heap leach technology
 makes them very viable today. 
 
Kabobo 
  
Ownership in 2001:    Anvil
Mining NL 100 per cent 
The geology
at Kabobo, 15 km southeast
of Luemba, is dominated by Lower-
and Mid-Proterozoic terranes,
comprising  mainly  metasediments  and
 intermediate
 to basic
intrusives. The presence
of PGMs, which occur in intimate association with both quartz-vein gold mineral isation  and  disseminated
 gold
 mineralisation
 in
 basic host  rocks,  is  also
 widely
 reported.   In  1998  Anvil
Mining  undertook  a review  of  the  pre-1960s  archival data which revealed
that extensive  regions had alluvial and  primary  gold
 occurrences
 (Resource
 Information Unit, 1999). 
 
Kyimbi 
  
Ownership in 2001:    Anvil
Mining NL 100 per cent 
At Kyimbi,  4 km northwest  of Lake  Tanganyika,  primary  gold  mineralisation  is  reported
 to
 be
 associated with   Proterozoic   metasediments
 (talc   schists,   mica schists,
 quartzites
 and
 limestones)
 and
 tonalitic
 intru sives. Quartz veins of significant width (up to 10m) and strike length
(greater than 1,5 km) are reported to contain gold, silver
and PGMs with gold grades consistent- 
 
 
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
 
 
 
 
 
  
 
 
  
 
ly
above 5 g/t. The intermediate and basic intrusives are
reported to have disseminated styles of gold mineralisa tion, with grades consistently above 3 g/t (Resource
Information Unit, 1999). 
 
In an area of copper deposits, gold was recovered in
the early 1900s at the Ruwe Mine (Elevatorski, 1995), located just north
of Kolwezi. Host rocks
are fractured sandstones with vein-type
mineralisation containing gold, silver, platinum and palladium. 
 
Notwithstanding their  very
low  grade,
altered rocks enriched through supergene processes akin to elutriation have been mined profitably at Subani, just north of the
Moto area (Lavreau, 1984). 
 
Ownership in 2001:   Banro
Resource Corporation 93 per cent Government of the Democratic
Republic of Congo 7 per cent 
 
The Twangiza Prospect, 35 km west of the Burundi border, occurs at the crest and southern end of a north-northwest-striking anticline. Previous
work defined a gold
resource along an 800 m strike, with a width of up to 300 m. The hydrothermal mineralisation consists of gold-bearing pyrite and arsenopyrite in quartz-carbonate veins and hosts disseminated gold, primarily along the
upper contact of diorite sills. Host rocks are intruded
by albites. The ores contain 25 per cent ankerite, calcite, gold-bearing arsenopyrite and pyrite. The estimated
resource is 104,6 Mt, grading 2,12 g/t Au. Initial mineralogical analyses indicated that the Twangiza
sulphide ore is amenable
to conventional crushing, grinding, flotation and cyanidation
processing techniques, while the oxide ore is amenable
to heap leaching. The Twangiza project
is believed to have the potential to produce at least 6 220 kg of gold annually. Alluvial
gold is also present. 
 
Ownership in 2001:   Cluff Mining Ltd 
 
Cluff was awarded four exploration licences, covering 18,330 km2, 
in
southern DRC in August
1997. A Mining Convention was signed with the government and approved by
Presidential decree on the 28th October 1998.
Exploration
work during 1998 entailed stream-sediment sampling, pitting and trenching by a team of geologists in an area of known gold occurrences. Initial results have
been encouraging with good gold grades, ranging
from 4,7
g/t to 138,2 g/t, occurring
in primary rock over a 14-km strike length. The exploration programme
continued
in 1999 with drilling and additional trenching. 
 
 
Kipushi 
  
Ownership in 2001:   America Mineral Fields Inc 100 per cent
Kipushi was a zinc-copper-lead deposit with a history
of production. The mineralisation occurs within a breccia
zone with associated faulting. In February 1996 America Mineral Fields had exclusive
rights, through a frame
work agreement with Gecamines, to conduct feasibility studies on the deposit
as it was also considered to con tain gold.
Preliminary studies began in January
1997 (Resource Information Unit,  1999).  Deposits  in  the
Democratic Republic of Congo containing other minerals were also being re-assessed for gold. 
 
Conclusion 
Greenstone belts, especially
Kilo, Moto and Ngayu, offer a high potential for future gold mining. According to a study carried
out in 1994 by the National Centre
of Geological and Mine Research, the soil in the Kilo-Moto
area is so rich in gold that, with modem extraction methods, it may be possible to recover 6-7 kg/t of gold from escavated rock and soil from around the former mines
of Office d'Or de .Kilo-Moto (Okimo). Thousands of artisanal miners are working in this region. In certain
places the concentrations reach the exceptional figure
of 18 kg/t Au.
The Kivu Province
also offers good potential for future mining. 
 
Moto Gold Mines Ltd (Australian) is exploring the Kilo Moto
 goldfield in Ituri Province. The project includes the following 
prospects: Pakaka and Pamao, Gorumbwa, Kibali, Durba – Karagba, Megi – 
Mengu, Ndala, Kombokolo, Agbarabo - Tete Bakangwe. The resource estimate
 is an indicated 55,40 million tonnes at 2,9 g/t Au for a total of 5,076
 million oz gold and 88,63 million tonnes at 3,8 g/t Au for 10,794 
million oz of inferred resources of gold. Moto
 risks having its mining permits cancelled after Okimo, the state-owned 
gold mining company, accused the company of failing to meet contracts, 
reported Reuters. Moto's Congolese unit had 90 days to honor contracts 
with Okimo, or it may have its mining leases revoked or reviewed, the 
newswire said on 26 January 2007, citing Okimo CEO Victor Kasongo. In 
terms of the contracts, Moto had committed to repair mining 
infrastructure and conduct geological surveys in return for a 60% stake 
in mineral concessions. A feasibility study, released in December, 2007,
 evaluated the gold project's Indicated Mineral Resources of 77.8 
million tons at 2.8 g/t Au for 7.0 million oz, but did not take into 
account an additional Inferred Mineral Resource base of 98.9 million 
tons at 3.8 g/t Au for 12.1 million oz, which it says has a conversion 
rate of close to 100% within key deposits. 
Moto is planning a US$483-million mine, which includes an US$80-million 
hydroelectric power station, US$78-million for initial mining fleets and
 an additional US$47-million construction contingency. 
It would be a 3.3 million oz opencast gold mine with a life of 8.5 
years, and the six-pit mine is expected to produce 400,000 oz of gold a 
year. Moto Goldmines reported a 47% increase in Indicated Mineral 
Resources at the Moto Gold Project in February,2008. Global Mineral 
Resources for the Project, above a 1.0 g/t Au reporting cut-off, are now
 estimated to be: Indicated Mineral Resources 95.3 million t @ 3.4 g/t 
for 10.3 million oz Au Inferred Mineral Resources 96.5 Mt @ 3.6 g/t for 
11.3 million oz Au. 
 
- 
 
- Many of Randgold Resources’ existing mines were borne from the group’s own greenfield exploration projects
– an exception being Kibali, which it and AngloGold acquired as an exploration
project in a C$546m cash-and-share transaction for Moto Goldmines in 2009. The
asset has an existing resource base of over 10 million ounces. Kibali will help raise Randgold’s annual production to more than 1.2 million ounces by 2014
 from about 800,000 in 2012.. The mine will produce at least 30,000 
ounces in 2013, 550,000 in 2014 and average about 600,000 ounces in its 
first eight years. 
 
 
  
Gold mineralisation in Kibali is found in volcaniclastics, sedimentary rocks and banded ferruginous cherts. 
Kibali Gold Mine 
  
  
  
Kibali Gold Mine 
 Source: www.randgoldresources.com
 
Kibali gold 
mine is situated 560 km north-east of Kisangani in the Orientale 
province. The site is located in the north-east of Democratic Republic 
of Congo (DRC) in Central Africa. The gold mine is being developed in an
 area of 1,836km2 on the Moto goldfields. When completed, it is expected
 to be one of the largest gold mines of Africa. The open pit and 
underground integrated mining at Kibali is expected to be commissioned 
in the fourth quarter of 2013. The mine will have a life of 18 years. 
The project is a joint venture (JV) of Rangold (45%), AngloGold Ashanti 
(45%) and Sokimo (10%). It is being developed and operated by Rangold 
Resources. The JV expects to invest approximately $1.4bn in the 
development of the Kibali project. The mine is expected to produce about
 600,000 ounces of gold per annum for the first 12 years. Production is 
expected to start by end of 2013. Kibali gold mine is located within the
 Moto greenstone belt. The belt contains Archean Kibalian 
volcano-sedimentary rocks and ironstone-chert horizons. The 
volcano-sedimentary sequence comprises of sedimentary rocks, variety of 
pyroclastic rocks, basaltic flow rocks, mafic-intermediate intrusions 
and intermediate-felsic intrusive rocks. The gold fields at Kibali are 
characterised by northeast and northwest trending faults. The gold 
mineralisation is scattered throughout the region. It is mainly found in
 volcaniclastics, coarse volcanicastics, sedimentary rocks and banded 
ferruginous cherts. 
The 
mineralisation is believed to have occurred structurally through 
quartz-carbonate alteration and pyrite. It is broadly divided into two 
zones. One part lies in the Kibali-Durba-Karagba which trends northeast 
and the second part lies in the northwest trending Pakaka-Mengu 
area. Rangold will be responsible for development and construction of 
the underground mine. The underground mine is being developed by 
constructing a tunnel using the box cut method, while also creating a 
terrace for the processing plant. The integrated mine will comprise of a
 twin-circuit sulphide and oxide plant, four hydropower stations and a 
standby high-speed thermal power generator as back-up to be used during 
the dry season. 
Work on the 
open pit mine development at Kibali began at the end of the second 
quarter of 2012. The development contractor for the decline system has 
been selected. The final design of the system has begun and the vertical
 shaft will be designed by an engineering company. The Kibali gold 
project is being developed in two overlapping phases. Phase 1 of the 
project is being developed from first quarter of 2012 to fourth quarter 
of 2013. It includes construction of the open pit operations, 
metallurgical plant, tailings storage facility, hydropower stations, 
back-up power plant, and all other associated infrastructure. The 
estimated cost of phase 1 is $920m. Phase
 2 will develop the underground mine and is expected to start production
 in 2014. The cost estimated for the phase is $650m. Mine
 construction Construction work on the Kibali gold project began in 
April 2012 and is underway. Approximately 200,000 cubic meters of land 
has been shifted for the foundation of metallurgical plant and 800,000m³
 for the bulk earthworks. Construction of associated infrastructure and 
earthwork of hydropower station and boxcut are in progress. The 
underground mine is being developed through twin decline system. The 
works completed in 2012 were manufacturing of the mills and hydro 
turbines, and construction of the ROM pad, platform for the vertical 
shaft and mine assay laboratory. 
 
 
- Banro Corporation (Canadian, AMEX:BAA; TSX:BAA)  is exploring the Twangiza-Namoya gold belt
 in the South Kivu and Maniema Provinces of the DRC. The project 
includes the following prospects: Twangiza, Lugushwa, Namoya and 
Kamituga. The current resource estimate is 2,72 million oz of measured 
and indicated resources, plus inferred resources of 8,11 million oz of 
gold at 1 g/t Au cut-off. According to sources at the Denver Gold Forum 
in September, 2007, the TSX and AMEX-listed company has retained 
Canadian investment bank RBC Capital Markets to run a bidding and due 
diligence process; apparently with the view of selling the company. The 
two most advanced projects are Twangiza and Namoya. Prefeasibility 
studies on both would be completed in the first quarter of 2008 and 
bankable feasibility studies would be done by the third quarter of 
2008. Twangiza
 currently has a total resource estimated at 6.24 million oz of gold. 
Planning at this stage is for a mine producing 300,000 oz/year over a 
life of about 13 years at an average cost of $275/oz over the 
life-of-mine. Namoya is a much smaller deposit with a resource of 1.35 
million oz at this stage and forecast average costs of $235/oz over the 
anticipated life-of-mine.
 
 
  
  
- Gold Fields (South African, NYSE:GFI; JSE:GFIELDS) is doing early stage exploration on the Kisenge
 Project, Katanga Province in the southern Democratic Republic of the 
Congo, some 680 kilometres from the main city of Lubumbashi.
 
 
- Elemental Minerals Ltd  is to acquire a 60 per cent interest in the Musefu
 gold project in the southern part of the Democratic Republic of Congo 
near the border with Angola. Gold was discovered there in 1920 and 
mining began by Belgian interests in 1932. Records kept until 1958 show 
that total production was 80,385 oz but no exploration work has been 
done at Musefu for more than 50 years. Historic drilling at one prospect
 shows intersections including 12,5 m at 7,51 g/t gold and 5 m at 16,09 
g/t.
 
 
Wa Balengela Kasai-Investments Congo (WBK),
 a Congolese mineral exploration and exploitation company, has filed 
litigation to validate its Memorandum of Understanding to establish a 
joint exploration venture with La Quinta Resources Corporation, (LAQ.V),which has been thrown into doubt by claims by Banro Corporation’s Congolese subsidiary.
 La Quinta announced that WBK has commenced an action in a commercial 
court in the Democratic Republic of Congo, to clear claims by Banro 
Congo, that Banro signed an earlier agreement concerning WBK's claimed 
concessions in Maniema and South Kivu Provinces in south eastern DRC. 
The court proceedings seek to block Banro Congo from exploring the 
concessions as well as compelling the company to pay damages and costs 
for interference. 
The disputed area has 32 exploration licences held by WBK, totalling 
7,010 square kilometres, located adjacent and between Banro’s Lugushwa 
and Namoya properties in the south of the Twangiza-Namoya gold belt, 
which extend 120 kilometres to the west. 
WBK holds extensive mineral leases in the DRC, and has numerous diamond 
exploration agreements. It has also been instrumental in introducing 
other companies into the DRC for copper and cobalt exploration. In 
March, 2007, Banro issued the following statement: 
The properties within the WBK licence area have a long history of both 
formal and informal mining. They were extensively mined mainly for 
alluvial gold by BelgikaOr from the early 1940s to the 1970s after which
 formal mining and exploration ceased. 
At least six previous mining sites can be easily identified, and artisanal mining continues on much of the target areas today. 
 
 
La Quinta Resources Corporation  (LAQ.V)
 has announced that it has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with 
AMIKI (Association Miniere du Kivu sprl) to lease, or acquire all of the
 Exploration and Exploitation rights of AMIKI on the Kampene Project in 
South Kivu Province in the Democratic Republic of Congo. The Kampene 
project covers 49 square Kilometers and includes an Exploration Licence 
and a Small Miner's Licence to mine and sell all mineral products from 
the Licence area including Gold, Silver, Coltan, (Columbite and 
Tantalite) and Cassiterite. Kampene has a long history of extensive 
mineral production dating back to the 1940's and the Belgian era, when 
mineral production for Gold, Cassiterite and Coltan formed the economic 
basis for the formation of the Town of Kampene,
 complete with its power plant, airstrip, schools churches and hospital.
 Since the Belgians left, production of gold has continued, first for 
the Congolese government during the Mobutu era and subsequently by the 
Rwandan Army during the second war of Liberation. AMIKI have held these 
claims since 1981 and reclaimed the property after the United Nations 
supported 2003 Peace Accord. Following the democratic election of 2006 
and subsequent revision of the Congolese Mining Laws AMIKI has now been 
able to convert the licences to a modern Permis d'exploitation number 
235 including a Small Miners Exploitation licence allowing immediate 
production from the site. 
The Kampene Project lies adjacent to a 7,000 square kilometre licence 
area for gold exploration covering the southern portion of the Twangiza -
 Namoya Gold Belt, owned by Wa Balengela Kasai-Investments Congo sprl, 
(WBK) which is the subject of a separate Agreement between LAQ and WBK 
and is currently in a due diligence process. 
 
 
- Mwana Africa plc
 has a joint venture agreement (80%) with Office des Mines d’Or de 
Kilomoto (Okimo) over an exploration property in the north-east of the 
DRC. The joint venture was signed in June 2005. The 3,000 square 
kilometres project area is a 100 km long belt running from Kilomines, 
adjacent to AngloGold Ashanti to the south, the Government’s Kilo Moto holdings to the north and to the east of ground held by Gold Fields.
 It is also located around the Zani-Kodo gold mine. Zani project started
 before independence and reached total production of 572,000 tonnes at 
6,5 g/t, but was abandoned due to unrest in 1964 during the civil war. 
Zani’s mineralized zone at the surface is 500m long and up to 30m wide, 
it consists of silicification in sheared greenstone with gold contained 
in sulphides. At the time of closure Zani’s sulphide reserve was 352,000
 tonnes at 8,15 g/t.
 
 
- AngloGold Ashanti (South Africa, NYSE:AU; JSE:ANG)
 is exploring the Mongbwalu project, a 10 by 15 km block, in the 
northeast. An inferred resource of two-million ounces to three-million 
oz has been estimated and an airborne geophysical survey to define 
additional regional drill targets was planned for 2007, in addition to 
70 000 m of drilling.
 
 
- Erongo Energy Limited
 (ASX code: ERN) is focused on exploring the Maniema Project, which 
covers 930km² and is located in east central Democratic Republic of the 
Congo, Central Africa. The Maniema Project is prospective for gold and 
tin, and is in the same geological setting as the Banro and Kilo-Moto 
gold deposits. Seven target areas have been identified from previous 
work, none of which have been previously drill tested. At Kabotshome on 
Prospect 4804, mineralisation has been identified over more than 1km, 
with widths of more than 80m. It remains open to the north, south and at
 depth. Results have included 25m at 2.17 g/t Au from 74m, including 
7.25m at 4.89 g/t Au, and 18m at 2.03 g/t Au from 68m including 4m at 
6.38 g/t Au. The results confirmed the potential for a  low-grade 
deposit at open pittable depths and a style of mineralisation that is 
similar to Banro’s Twangiza and Namoya deposits. Erongo completed a 
drilling program at the Mitunda and Mbutu prospects in June 2012 that 
potentially identified two flat-lying mineralised structures. The 
Company is now planning further diamond drilling at Kabotshome, with 
results expected by August 2012. Erongo also plans to explore the Kalulu
 Prospect, a tin soil anomaly surrounded by extensive artisanal 
workings, in 2012. The Company is currently completing a due diligence 
review of the Giro Gold Project, in northeast DRC. Erongo has entered 
into an agreement to acquire up to 60% of four tenements, which are west
 of Randgold Resources' multi-million ounce Kibali deposits. Evaluation was expected to be complete in July 2012. 
 
 
  
Production from
 the upstream oil industry, mainly from offshore fields, is an important
 contributor to the DRC’s economy. Oil production in 2003 was estimated 
at 22,000 barrels per day. Proved reserves have been estimated at 1.538 
billion barrels (January 2002). There is one oil refinery in the country
 with a capacity of 15,000 barrels per day. At present it is operating 
at about 50 percent capacity. There are plans to upgrade the refinery to
 50,000 barrels per day, but this is dependent on finding foreign 
investment and a complete resolution to the political instability. 
Exploration for
 oil and gas in the DRC began in the 1960s along the country’s Atlantic 
Ocean coastline at the estuary of the Congo river, which is located 
between the prolific offshore production region of northern Angola and 
its oil-rich enclave of Cabinda. The country became an oil producer in 
1976 when its offshore fields came on stream. Its entire crude output is
 exported because the crude characteristics are incompatible with the 
configuration of the country’s only refinery. 
The Ministry of Mines and Energy regulates the industry, while a new State company, La Congolaise des Hydrocarbures (Cohydro) was
 formed in 1999 to take responsibility for all activities related to the
 oil sector, from exploration and production to refining. 
The DRC has 
seven producing offshore gasfields, most of which is flared. Some of the
 gas is re-injected and a portion is used in gas-lift operations. Proved
 reserves have been estimated at 104.8 billion cubic metres (January 
2002). Two major three-year projects have been initiated in an attempt 
to increase production levels both onshore and offshore. 
Various foreign
 companies are operating in partnership with the government in the 
upstream oil sector. The most significant being a consortium operating 
the offshore concessions which includes Chevron, Teikoku Oil of Japan, and Union Oil of California.
 The Ministry of Mines and Energy is updating petroleum legislature to 
supervise and control the awarding of exploration permits and production
 concessions. 
- Oil production: 21,090 bbl/day (2004)
 
- Oil exports: 21,090 bbl/day (2006 est.)
 
- Oil proved reserves: 1.538 billion bbl (1 January 2002)
 
 
- Natural gas proved reserves: 991.1 million cu m (1 January 2005 est.)
 
 
- Congo Gulf Oil Company (owned by Chevron of the United States (50%), Teikoku Oil Company Ltd of Japan (32.3%), and Unocal Corporation,
 which merged with Chevron in 2005, (17.7%)] produced approximately 
17,000 bbl/d of crude petroleum from seven offshore wells in 2000. Congo
 Gulf Oil accounted for about 60% of national petroleum production.
 
 
- Perenco
 operates six onshore fields, with an output of approximately 20,000 
barrels per day. Perenco is also the operator of DRC's offshore 
concession and terminal - assets it acquired from Chevron in 2004.
 
 
 
- Tullow Oil
 signed a production Sharing Agreement (PSA) in July 2006 to gain a 
48.5% operated interest in Blocks I and II in the prospective Albertine 
Graben. Blocks I and II cover some 6,500 sq km over the onshore and 
offshore acreage in Congo (DRC) part of the Albertine Graben which 
extends into neighbouring Uganda. The planned work programme comprises a
 number of technical studies in preparation for the acquisition of 400 
km of 2D seismic data during the first licence period. Tullow has 
interests (50-100%) in all three blocks comprising the Ugandan part of 
the graben where recent exploration has recently proven the existence of
 a working hydrocarbon system. Five oil discoveries in the Albertine 
Basin in Uganda have significantly enhanced the prospectivity of the 
region. As a result an aggressive exploration and appraisal programme is
 planned for Uganda and Congo (DRC).
 
 
  
Source: Tullow Oil 
 
-                        Heritage Oil Corporation
 signed a Production Sharing Agreement in the DRC                       
  in July 2006 for a 39.5% interest in Blocks I and II                  
       in the prospective Albert Basin. Blocks I and II cover           
              over 6,000 km2 over the onshore and offshore acreage      
                   in the DRC part of the Albert Basin that extends into
                         neighbouring Uganda.
 
 
 
 
| Year | Production | Unit of Measure | % Change |  
| 2002 | 300 | Metric tons | NA |  
| 2003 | 800 | Metric tons | 166.67 % |  
| 2004 | 3200 | Metric tons | 300.00 % |  
| 2005 | 4400 | Metric tons | 37.50 % |  
| 2006 | 3800 | Metric tons | -13.64 % |  
| 2007 | 8900 | Metric tons | 134.21 % |  
| 2008 | 11800 | Metric tons | 32.58 % |  
| 2009 | 9400 | Metric tons | -20.34 % |  
 
 
Kivu Resources Limited
 is active in the eastern DRC and Rwanda. Historically, the area was an 
important tin and tantalum producer. Kivu Resources, through its wholly 
owned local companies (Metal Processing Association SARL in Rwanda, 
Central African Resources SPRL and Mining and Processing Congo SPRL in 
the DRC) will hold a number of assets in the DRC and Rwanda including a 
management agreement with SAKIMA, a state owned company, in the DRC to 
manage tin and tantalum production from small scale miners; an option to
 acquire an 80% shareholding in SAKIMA's mining permits; a joint venture
 with the government of Rwanda on the Gatumba mining permits; as well as
 a number of prospecting permits in the region. A consortium consisting 
of EDIN Mining Limited, a mining investment company domiciled in the 
British Virgin Islands, Ireland based Coronation Capital Limited and Metmar Limited will acquire a 50% stake in Kivu Resources. The consortium has an option to increase its shareholding in Kivu Resources to 70%. 
  
 
 
| Year | Production | Unit of Measure | % Change |  
| 2003 | 120 | Metric tons, tungsten content | NA |  
| 2004 | 20 | Metric tons, tungsten content | -83.33 % |  
| 2005 | 180 | Metric tons, tungsten content | 800.00 % |  
| 2006 | 500 | Metric tons, tungsten content | 177.78 % |  
| 2007 | 570 | Metric tons, tungsten content | 14.00 % |  
| 2008 | 340 | Metric tons, tungsten content | -40.35 % |  
| 2009 | 170 | Metric tons, tungsten content | -50.00 % |  
 
Source:USGS
History 
  
Historically 
the DRC has been a significant producer of uranium. The Shinkolobwe Mine
 in the Katanga Province is known for producing ore rich in uranium. 
Deposits in the area are understood to have been discovered in 1915 and 
extraction began in the 1920's. Commercial production ceased in 1960. 
The Shinkolobwe
 mine is a vein type deposit, with most of the deposits having grades 
between 250 and 8,500 ppm. Uranium extracted from Shinkolobwe was used 
to develop the atom bombs dropped on Nagasaki and Hiroshima during the 
Second World War. 
- UraMin was reportedly interested in buying the Shinkolobwe uranium mine.
 
 
- Brinkley Mining plc
 has signed a Memorandum of Understanding with the government of the 
Democratic Republic of Congo ("DRC") which will provide the company's 
70% owned subsidiary, Brinkley Africa Ltd, with priority access to the 
DRC’s uranium resources. The Congo government subsequently said it would
 block a joint venture between Brinkley Mining and the Atomic Energy 
Authority (CGEA) after finding terms of a memorandum of understanding 
between the parties to be 'questionable'.
 
 
 
- Gécamines (La Générale des Carrières et des Mines), the Congolese state-owned mining company, owns the Kipushi zinc mine.
  At the height of production, in the late 1980s, Kipushi produced 
143,000 tonnes of zinc and 43,000 tonnes of copper. Mining at Kipushi 
was stopped in 1993 when the government of Mobutu Sese Seko ran out of 
funds. The mine has 17 million tonnes of ore, with 2,83 million tonnes 
of zinc and nearly 400,000 tonnes of copper. Gecamines has invited bids 
to restart the mine despite South African miner Exxaro Resources, 
formerly Kumba Resources, and Canada’s First Quantum Minerals claim to 
rights to the project.
 
- United Resources won
 the tender to develop the deposit and will invest up to $400m in the 
project, Gecamines MD Paul Fortin, announced in February,2007. United 
Resources, a group of financial companies, won the tender because it 
offered Gecamines a 37% stake in the project. South Africa's Exxaro 
Resources and First Quantum Minerals have taken the matter to court in 
Belgium.
 
- A
 Belgian court ruled on 23 March, 2007, that Congolese mining company 
Gecamines suspend its tender for investors to develop the Kiphusi zinc 
deposit, in the Democratic Republic of Congo, paving the way for Exxaro 
Resources and First Quantum to file lawsuits, that could run into 
millions of dollars, against the State-owned firm. Exxaro and First 
Quantum could sue Gecamines on the merits of the case and request the 
enforcement of the agreements.
 
- Ivanplats' Kipushi
 zinc-copper project marks a second asset in the DRC's Katanga province.
 Kipushi lies 30 km southwest of Lubumbashi, and produced roughly 60 
million tonnes grading 11.03% Zn and 6.78% Cu from 1924 to 1993. 
Ivanplats owns 68% of the project, with the DRC's state-owned La 
Générale des Carrières et des Mines (Gécamines) holding the 
remainder. Ivanplats submitted an application to extend its exploitation
 permit at Kipushi on June 15. The property hosts surface mining and 
processing infrastructure, including: two concentrators, administrative 
offices, workshops and housing, as well as a connection to the national 
power grid. Underground access is provided through five shafts, with the
 No.5 shaft providing primary access to the lower levels. Ivanplats is 
in the process of dewatering the mine in a bid to refurbish existing 
shaft infrastructure to the 1,150-m level. According to filings the 
company estimates US$30 million in remaining expenditures on the 
refurbishment over the next two years. Kipushi holds a historic resource
 totalling 17 million indicated tonnes grading 2.23% Cu and 16.76% Zn. 
But the company's underground exploration will focus on the Big Zinc 
high grade zone, which hosts 4.7 million historic tonnes grading 38.6% 
Zn and 0.76% Cu.
 
 
Mining in the Ituri Province of the Congo 
A Contemporary Profile 
by David Barouski; May 14, 2007 
  
Most people who
 became aware of the 2nd Congo War (1998 to 2003  ) did so because of 
the violence unleased in the (then) Ituri District, which was created in
 June of 1999 by General James Kazini of the Ugandan People’s Defense 
Force (UPDF).  After the Lusaka Accords were signed and the UPDF 
officially pulled out of the country, the neighboring countries of 
Uganda and Rwanda aggravated and exploited ethnic differences to create 
numerous militias that went to war over the vast gold tracts in Ituri.  
The illegal sale of this gold in neighboring countries served to fund 
the war by purchasing arms, military uniforms, and other supplies.  
Incomprehensable acts of violence and rape occurred, and child soldiers 
were the norm.  Today, with the aid of U.N. forces, Ituri has found a 
relative peace. 
 
  
Ituri is unique
 compared to the Kivu provinces to the south because throughout the 1st 
Congo War (1996 to 19997) to the present day, war over minerals has 
always been about gold and timber.  The rest of Northeastern Congo went 
through several distinct phases where one particular commodity was more 
sought after than another.  When the 2nd Congo War broke out, diamonds 
were the most coveted mineral until mid-2000.  In 2000, the coltan 
(columbium-tantalite) boom occurred due to increased military-industrial
 spending, and the arrival of popular electronics equipment (the cell 
phone boom, Sony Playstation, etc.), which drastically increased market 
demand for coltan.  What started off in 1999 as a $20 (U.S.) per pound 
commodity rose to $380 (U.S.) per pound by December of 2000.  With 80% 
of the world’s coltan reserves, fierce fighting for the mining sites 
claimed countless victims.(1)  The world market reserves quickly became 
so saturated with smuggled coltan that the price plummeted back down by 
the end of 2001.  The smugglers in the Kivus then focused on the highest
 grade ores that were found primarily in Walikale Territory. 
 
  
After the 
signing of the Sun City Final Act that officially ended the 2nd Congo 
War in 2003, world demand for tin rose sharply due to new environmental 
laws in the European Union (E.U.) and Japan.  Cassiterite, a mineral 
that is smelted into tin oxide, became the most desirable commodity in 
the Congo along with niobium, a chemically-unique form of columbium used
 in heat-resistant alloys that are utilized in a variety of 
applications.  The Lueshe mine in Congo holds the only large reservoir 
of niobium in the world.  To this day, niobium and cassiterite remain 
the most coveted mineral to smuggle in the Kivus for the remaining 
dissidents, particularly by Rwandan-backed General Nkundabatware and his
 men in North Kivu Province. 
 
  
Throughout the 
wars and for years before that, multinational corporations sought to 
exploit the same gold mining areas in Ituri that the militias did.  The 
mines are primarily concentrated around the towns of Mongbwalu, Watsa, 
Durba, Kilo, and Moto in very remote areas.  Today, with some likeness 
of peace, the fight for control of the concessions will begin anew.  The
 Deputy Minister of Mines, Victor Kasongo, has begun a review of the 
mining contracts for the newly elected Congolese Government and he said 
50% of the contracts may be voided.(2)  All official negotiations for 
mining rights have ended until all the contracts have been reviewed.  
This could prove to be troublesome for both the Congolese Government and
 the mining companies. 
 
  
The mining 
concession that includes the Watsa/Durba area (OKIMO Concession #38) was
 obtained by the Canadian gold-mining firm Barrick Gold from the Office 
of Kilo-Moto (OKIMO) on 3rd August, 1996 before the fall of President 
Joseph Mobutu Sese Seko.  OKIMO, the state-owned gold mining company, 
became a joint partner in Barrick’s project.  Barrick initially became 
interested in the concession after the U.S.-based consulting firm Davy 
McKee Corporation completed a feasibility study of the area in 1991.  
Between October and December of 1996, while the war was raging in the 
area southwest of the concession, Barrick completed several of their own
 exploratory drills, but the results were less promising than the 
reports OKIMO gave the company.  In 1996, Barrick also made a side deal 
with General Kpama Baramoto, head of President Mobutu’s Guarde Civile. 
General Baramoto allowed Barrick to mine gold around his base in Bunia 
in exchange for funds to rebuild Bunia’s airport.(3)   
 
  
Barrick 
restructured their mining contract after the Alliance of Democratic 
Forces for the Liberation of Congo-Zaire (AFDL-CZ) headed by Laurent 
Kabila took power in 1997, but they retained the mining rights to 
Concession #38.  They reportedly began these negotiations before L. 
Kabila reached the capital city of Kinshasa.(4  ) Barrick was allowed to
 keep the contract President Mobutu Sese Seko signed after Laurent 
Kabila took power because L. Kabila’s Finance Minister Mawampanga Mwana 
Nanga (who later became Minister of Agriculture) insisted he honor “good
 faith” contracts between President Mobutu and certain foreign mining 
firms.  This was an unusual move because Minister Nanga was known to be a
 staunch critic of foreign mining firms.  He had already canceled the 
mining contracts of Belgium’s Union Minère (now Umicore) and 
DeBeers/Anglo-American despite strong protests from Nelson Mandela.   
However, Minister Nanga apparently had a soft spot for 
American-connected firms, perhaps because he graduated from Pennsylvania
 State University and taught at Kentucky University.(5) 
 
  
Minister Nanga 
urged AFDL-CZ’s Mining Minister Kambale Kabila Mututulo to sign off a 
one billion dollar (U.S.) deal to Jean-Raymond Boulle’s Hope, 
Arkansas-based (at the time) American Mineral Fields Incorporated (AMF) 
(now Adastra), one of Barrick’s business partners.  The deal was for two
 huge mining concessions in Kipushi and Kolwezi, located in the Katanga 
Province (then Shaba Province).  Mr. Boulle desperately needed access to
 the minerals because he was bidding to acquire the contract to build a 
new space station to replace Mir, a $60 billion dollar (U.S.) endeavor. 
 His acquisition of the Mir contract is remarkable when considering AMF 
was only incorporated in 1995.(6)   
 
  
A major 
competitor of Anglo-American with several former Anglo-American/DeBeers 
directors on its executive team, AMF already had the deal lined up in 
April 1997 after Mr. Boulle (a Briton born in Mauritius) visited L. 
Kabila in Goma after the AFDL-CZ/RPA captured Lubumbashi (Katanga 
Province) and put Katangan Governor Kyungu ku Mwanza under house 
arrest.(7)  Mr. Boulle reportedly fronted $50 million dollars (U.S.) to 
L. Kabila for the deal and he likely used some of it to buy arms and 
equipment.(8)  However, AMF did eventually partner with  Anglo-American. 
 
  
American 
Diamond Buyers, another company owned by Mr. Boulle and Joseph Martin 
(and a competitor of DeBeers), reportedly paid L. Kabila $25,000 (U.S.) 
to buy a diamond mining license from the AFDL-CZ.(9)  When the company 
opened for business in Kisangani before the 1st Congo War was even over 
(but after the ADFL-CZ controlled the town), Zairians literally broke 
the door down to sell their diamonds.  Several people could even  be 
seen around town wearing tee-shirts given out for free by the 
company.(10) 
 
  
Mr. Boulle (a 
former Anglo-American executive who also acted as an advisor to Guinea’s
 Mining Minister) also allowed L. Kabila and Minister Nanga to use his 
personal corporate Lear jet for transportation around the country.  In 
return, besides the mining contracts, L. Kabila allowed Mr. Boulle to 
set up a trading post in Mbuji-Mayi immediately after the AFDL-CZ 
captured the city during the same month Lubumbashi fell.  He also 
greatly reduced the price of AMF’s annual mining license fees.(11)  Mr. 
Boulle and two other connections to AMF at the time, Chairman Michael 
McMurrough and business associate Jackson Stephens, were reported to be 
friends of Bill Clinton since his days as Arkansas’ governor.(12) 
 
  
One week before
 the AFDL-CZ took Kinshasa, AMF chartered a group of investors to meet 
L. Kabila.  Mr. Boulle hoped to attract investors for his new mining 
projects.  Representatives from CIBC Wood Gundy, Bunting Warburg (a 
branch of London's SBC Warburg), First Bank of Boston, Citibank, 
Deutsche Morgan Grenfell, and Goldman Sachs attended along with several 
reporters, Robert Briscotti (investment banker), Robin Sanders (Director
 of African Affairs for the NSC), and Cynthia McKinney (former U.S. 
Congresswoman for the State of Georgia).(13)  The meeting went over 
well.  Washington D.C. based New Millenium Investment Limited signed a 
joint venture deal with the AFDL-CZ to run Goma’s Development Bank.  
Bethesda, Maryland-based Comsat signed on to sell satellite phones in 
Goma.(14) 
 
  
Almost 
immediately after AMF got its mining contract with the AFDL-CZ, DeBeers 
sent the head of its Kinshasa branch (Nicholas Davenport) and an 
Anglo-American director to meet with L. Kabila and Minister Mawampanga 
in Goma to plead for a contract.  Under the Mobutu regime, DeBeers held a
 4% stake in MIBA while its Central Selling Organization had rights to 
the entire Zairian state production.  DeBeers also had five comptoirs in
 Zaire that bought from artisian miners.(15) 
 
  
DeBeers was 
also deeply entrenched in Zaire through Anglo-American Corporation 
(which is nearly 50% owned by DeBeers), one of its business partners.  
The Canadian company Banro Corporation merged with Belgium-based Mines 
D'or Du Zaire (MDDZ) in September 1996 shortly before President Mobutu 
left Zaire in exile.  A ~13% shareholder in Banro was U.K.-based Cluff 
Mining.  The majority shareholder in Cluff Mining was 
Anglo-American.(16)  Through the MDDZ merger, Banro was able to obtain a
 93% interest in SAKIMA.(17  )Today, Banro is actively mining gold in 
Twangiza, Kamituga, Lugushwa, and Namoya in South Kivu. 
 
  
Another company
 who wanted in on the action was First Quantum Minerals.  Their Bwana 
Mkubwa branch fronted money to Laurent Kabila when he was with the 
AFDL-CZ and had not yet reached Kinshasa.  They received mining 
authorizations in return.(18) 
 
  
First Quantum 
recently tried to buy out Adastra (formerly AMF) and still holds 
lucrative concessions in the Congo.  On their Board of Directors sits 
Chairman Phillip Pascall (Rio Tinto), Rupert Pennant-Rea (Chairman of 
Henderson Group plc; Director of British American Tobacco plc, Sherrit 
International Corporation, Gold Fields Limited, and Rio Narcea; former 
editor for The Economist and the former Deputy Governor of the Bank of 
England), and Andrew Adams (AngloGold). 
 
  
Barrick created
 a joint-venture with Anglo-American in March 1998 to explore OKIMO 
Concession #38 in preparation for active mining.  In 1998, 
Anglo-American created its AngloGold Limited subsidiary and in May 1998,
 the firm purchased nearly half of Barrick’s stakes in the Congo.(19)  
Exploration occurred from February to August 1998 but their staff was 
forced to flee in August due to the outbreak of the 2nd Congo War.  
AngloGold Limited assumed operational control of Concession # 38 on 5 
August, 1998, but they were never able to actively mine the concession 
because of the war.  OKIMO repossessed the land after they fled.(20)  
After OKIMO reclaimed the concession, Barrick made a side deal with RCD 
Mining Minister Alex Thambwe in 1999 for the rights to mine the land, 
but Barrick was unable to mine on the land because of the ongoing war on
 the mining concessions in Ituri.(21) 
 
  
After the 2nd 
Congo War began, the UPDF and the Rally for Congolese 
Democracy-Liberation Movement (RCD-ML) occupied Watsa until they 
withdrew as a provision of the Lusaka Accords in 1999.  Militias in 
Ituri multiplied drastically in 2000 to seize control of the power void 
left behind when the UPDF withdrew.  Barrick Gold sub-contracted its 
concession to Uganda’s Caleb International, owned by General Salim 
Saleh, Ugandan President Yoweri Museveni’s half-brother.(22)  It appears
 the intent was to hold and protect the concession for Barrick until the
 fighting stopped.  Meanwhile, the Hema Union for Congolese Patriots 
(UPC), RCD-ML, Jean-Pierre Bemba’s Movement for the Liberation of Congo 
(MLC), the Lendu Nationalist and Integrationist Front (FNI), People’s 
Armed Forces of Congo (FAPC), and various other factions fought over 
Watsa and Durba until most of them either disarmed or were driven out by
 MONUC/FARDC offensives last year.  The MLC moved into the area until 
mid-2006, when MONUC gained full control over Watsa.(23) 
 
  
Barrick’s 
business practices have not gone completely unnoticed.  In December 
2002, Barrick Gold was sued in an anti-trust case for literally 
manipulating the price of gold on the world market.  Banking giant J.P. 
Morgan (prior to their merger with Chase Manhattan) was an investor in a
 company called Argo Partnership, who became a significant shareholder 
in TrizecHahn.  Barrick bought TrizecHahn , making J.P. Morgan a 
shareholder in Barrick Gold by virtue of the buyout.  J.P. Morgan 
reportedly loaned Barrick gold reserves from a central bank to 
short-sell on the market, increasing the supply and driving the price 
down.  The money from the gold sales was invested in money market 
instruments at J.P. Morgan for a higher return than the gold borrowing 
rate, thus creating a profit.  The short sales were considered off-sheet
 assets, so the purchase of gold off the market was not reflected as a 
loss in their balance sheet.(24) 
 
  
Barrick would 
then mine the gold needed to replace the borrowed stores at the central 
bank, but a clause in the J.P. Morgan gold lending deal gave Barrick an 
infinite number of years to pay back the central bank.  This meant 
Barrick could buy up the gold supplies to drive the price up, or they 
could dump their borrowed stores and drop the price generating a profit 
for both Barrick and J.P. Morgan.  Recall that during 1998, as Barrick 
was evicted from the Congo, the price of gold was falling considerably. 
 It has been rising steadily since 2001.  (Ibid) 
 
  
Currently, 
Barrick has terminated all non-project hedge contracts.  They have 
allotted $23 million dollars (U.S.) for exploratory efforts in Africa 
for the 2007 fiscal year.  Another $26 million dollars (U.S.) is 
delegated to explore the Sedibelo PGM deposit on the Bushveld Complex in
 South Africa.  They completed a feasibility study on the Buzwagi gold 
project in Tanzania, where Barrick is also opening a joint venture 
project with Xstrata Nickel in Kabanga.  Barrick is also eager to 
develop their Reko Diq joint venture in the Baluchistan Province of 
Pakistan.(25)  They are also selling all their shares in NovaGold.  
 
  
The Baluchistan
 Province is the largest province in Pakistan.  It borders the Helmand 
Province of Afganistan, an opium crop district and Taliban (meaning 
“students” in Arabic) stronghold.  The Baluchistan Province has been 
used as a rear base for training and staging their armed forces.  The 
Taliban are a Nationalist Sunni faction comprised of Pashtuns, who form a
 very sizable population in Baluchistan Province.  The area is awash in 
locally ruled fiefdoms by tribal chiefs and mullahs (Islamic clergymen).
  In Pakistan, they are usually from the Wahhabi or Salafi sect. 
 
  
The individuals behind Barrick Gold are so well-connected they are worth noting in detail: 
 
  
Howard Beck: 
Corporate Director of Barrick Gold.  Formerly involved with BAE, and 
Citibank Canada.  BAE bought out United Defense Industries (a company 
formerly owned by The Carlyle Group) in 2005.  Just recently, BAE was 
the subject of a corruption probe in Great Britain, but Prime Minister 
Tony Blair and Attorney General Lord Peter Goldsmith ordered the 
investigation suspended.  Some British officials believe the firm 
lobbied Lord Goldsmith to drop the investigation.(26)  BAE is a 20% 
owner of Airbus.(27) 
 
  
Gustavos 
Cisneros: Board Member and International Advisory Board Member of 
Barrick Gold.  He is the Chief Executive Officer of Cisneros Group, 
which includes television and radio networks, broadcasting and 
telecommunications operations, programming and production companies for 
television and radio, supermarkets, beverage production, fast food 
outlets, video franchises, and music production.  He essentially owns 
the Latin-American media market. 
 
  
Mr. Cisneros is
 Venuzeuelan and a stauch opponent of Venezuela’s current Populist 
President Hugo Chavez.  Mr Cisneros is a founding (and current) member 
of the International Advisory Board of the Council on Foreign Relations 
and a former Director of the International Advisory Committee of Chase 
Manhattan Bank.  He is director of the Chairman's Council of the 
Americas Society and a member of the International Advisory Council of 
the United States Information Agency, the Board of Overseers of the 
International Center for Economic Growth, the International Advisory 
Board of Power Corporation of Canada, the International Advisory Board 
of Gulfstream Aerospace Corporation, the International Advisory Board of
 AEA Investors Incorporated, and is a board member of Panamerican 
Beverages Incorporated (a Coca-Cola bottling company).   
 
  
In addition, he
 is a Trustee of Rockefeller University in New York and sits on the 
Board of Georgetown University.  He also sits on the International 
Advisory Board of Columbia University, the Advisory Committee for the 
David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard 
University, and the Rockefeller University Fund.  Mr. Cisneros acts as 
the Commissioner of the Global Information Infrastructure Commission and
 is a member of the Council for Latin American Studies at John Hopkins 
University.  In addition, Mr. Cisneros is a Governor of the World 
Economic Forum.(28) 
 
  
Donald Carty: A
 Corporate Director of Barrick Gold, Dell, Sears and Roebuck.  He is 
also the Chairman of Virgin America, Porter Airlines, and is the former 
Chief Executive Officer of American Airlines. 
 
  
Marshall Cohen:
 Lawyer for Cassel’s Brock & Blackwell, and former Canadian Deputy 
Minister of several areas including Finance, Industry, Trade & 
Commerce, Energy, and Mines & Resources.  He is a Corporate Director
 of Barrick Gold, American-International Group, TD Ameritrade, Premcor 
Incorporated, Metaldyne Corporation, Toronto-Dominion Bank, and Lafarge 
Corporation.  He is a member of the International Advisory Committee for
 The Blackstone Group.  Formerly, he was the International Councillor 
for CSIS, and a former member of the Executive Committee of The 
British-North American Committee and The Trilateral Commission.  He was 
also the Chairman of the International Trade Advisory Committee for the 
Government of Canada. 
 
  
John Crow: 
Corporate Director of Barrick Gold.  He is the former Governor of the 
Bank of Canada (1987 to 1994); Chairperson of the Central Bank Governors
 of the Group of Ten countries, and one-time head of the North American 
Division of the International Monetary Fund (IMF). 
 
  
Brian Mulroney:
 Corporate Director and Chairman of the International Advisory Board of 
Barrick Gold and most notably, the former Prime Minister of Canada (1984
 to 1993).  He is a Director of Archer Daniels Midland Company, the 
Atlantic Institute for Market Studies, and the Cendant Corporation.  He 
is Chairman of Trizec Properties Incorporated, America Online-Latin 
America Incorporated, and Quebecor Incorporated.  He sits on the 
International Advisory Board of the China International Trust and 
Investment Corporation, JPMorgan Chase, Independent News and Media, 
Power Corporation, Bombardier Incorporated, Aerospace Group - North 
America, and General Enterprise Management Services Limited.  In 
addition, he is an honorary trustee of the George H.W. Bush Presidential
 Library and Senior Partner in the Ogilvy Renault law firm. 
 
  
Anthony Munk: Peter Munk’s son.  He is a Director of Barrick Gold and Onex. 
 
  
Peter Munk: 
Founder, Director; member of the International Advisory Board; and 
former Chief Executive Officer of Barrick Gold and the Trizec 
Corporation.  Mr. Munk also founded Clairtone Sound Corporation.  In 
addition, he is a member of the World Gold Council and the 1001 Club.  
Mr. Munk is a close friend of infamous Saudi Arabian arms dealer Adnan 
Khoshoggi, who was involved in financing and setting up arms deals to 
Iran during the Iran-Contra scandal.(29)  Mr. Khoshoggi helped Mr. Munk 
launch Barrick Gold in 1983, but later sold his shares to Mr. Munk just 
before details of his involvement in Iran-Contra broke in 1985. 
 
  
Lord Charles 
Powell of Baywater: Lord Powell is a cross-bench member of Britain’s 
Upper House of Parliament and the House of Lords, where he sits on the 
Economic Affairs Committee.  He served as the Private Secretary and 
Advisor on Foreign Affairs and Defense to former Prime Ministers 
Margaret Thatcher and John Major.  Lord Powell is currently an Advisor 
to the Chairmen of BAE and Eastern Star Publications.  He is a principal
 at New Bridge Strategies, a business advisory firm currently working in
 Iraq.  He holds many directorships, including: British Mediterranean 
Airways, Caterpillar Incorporated, Financière Agache, Moet-Hennessy 
Louis Vuitton, Sagitta Asset Management (Chairman), Mandarin Oriental 
Hotel Group, Jardine Matheson & Company Group, Textron Corporation, 
Yell Group, Limited Schindler Holdings, Switzerland, and Northern Trust 
Global Services.   
 
  
He also serves 
on the Advisory Board of Barrick Gold, Diligence (a PMC), Hicks Muse. 
Delta HPC (a former business partner of Lockheed Martin), GEMS Private 
Equity Fund, Rolls-Royce European Strategy Board, Textron International,
 Wingate Capital, Magna Corporation, the European Advisory Group GMBH, 
Thales U.K., and Alfa Capital.  Lord Powell is Chairman of the Said 
Business School Foundation’s (Oxford University) Board of Trustees.  He 
is also active with several non-corporate groups including trustee 
postitions at the Aspen Institute (USA), British Museum, and the Karim 
Rida Said Foundation.  He is a Director of the Atlantic Partnership, the
 Singapore Millennium Foundation, and the U.K.-China Forum.  He is also 
President of the China-Britain Business Council  and a member of the 
Council of the International Institute for Strategic Studies. 
 
  
William Cohen: 
Member of Barrick Gold and Intel Corporation’s International Advisory 
Boards.  Intel was a major consumer of tantalum in the early 2000s 
during the computer industry boom.  He is currently the Chairman and 
Chief Executive Officer of the Cohen Group, an international business 
consulting firm.  He is currently a Director at Viacom and AIG.  Mr. 
Cohen is also CNN’s World Affairs Contributor.  He was the U.S. 
Secretary of Defense (1997 to 2001) during the beginning of the 2nd 
Congo War and NATO’s bombing of Kosovo.   
 
  
Prior to 
working for the DOD, he was a U.S. Senator for the state of Maine (1979 
to 1997) and served on the Select Committee on Intelligence (1983 to 
1991, 1995 to 1997), the Governmental Affairs Committee ), Assistant 
Secretary of State for African Affairs  in George H.W. Bush’s 
administration) and the Armed Services Committee (1979 to 1997).  In 
addition, he served on the Iran-Contra investigative committee in 1987. 
 Before he was elected Senator, he was a House Representative for 
Maine’s 2nd District ).  While in Congress, he served on the House 
Judiciary Committee that investigated the Watergate scandal.  He served 
on the Board of Directors of the Council on Foreign Relations ) on its 
Middle East Study Group and currently works for several think-tanks and 
committees including the CSIS (Counselor and Trustee) , the School for 
Advanced International Studies, the William S. Cohen Center for 
International Policy and Commerce at the University of Maine in Orono 
(Chairman), and the Brookings Institution.  He established and led U.S. 
delegations to the American-Arab Dialogue in Cairo and is the Chairman 
Emeritus of the U.S.-Taiwan Business Council.  Mr. Cohen is also a 
former trustee of the Africa Foundation.  In May 1992, he got Rwandan 
opposition parties to meet with RPF officials in Brussels.(30) 
  
Paul G. 
Desmarais Senior: Member of the International Advisory Board of Barrick 
Gold and Chase Manhattan Bank N.A.  He is Chairman of the Executive 
Committee of the Power Corporation, and honorary President of the 
Canada-China Business Council.  He is a former Director of TotalElfFina;
 former member of the Trilateral Commission; current member of the Privy
 Council, and a Companion of the Order of Canada.  He is on the Advisory
 Board of the Carlyle Group and CSIS.  Mr. Desmarais is a personal 
friend of the Bush family (Former U.S. President George Herbert Walker 
Bush is the former Chairman of Barrick Gold’s International Advisory 
Board [1995 to 1999] and was a personal golfing partner of President 
Mobutu (31) and Brian Mulroney.(32) 
 
  
Vernon Jordan 
Junior: He was Chairman of Bill Clinton’s presidential transition team 
and one of his top political advisors as well.  He is currently a Senior
 Counselor practicing general, corporate, legislative and international 
law with the firm Akin, Gump, Strauss, Hauer, & Feld.  In addition, 
he is a member of the Bilderberger Group, the Iraq Study Group, the 
Council on Foreign Relations, and the Trilateral Commission.   He sits 
on the Board of Directors for American Express, Dow Jones & Company,
 Lazard Freres and Company, J.C. Penney Company, Xerox Corporation, 
Ashbury Automotive Group, and the LBJ Foundation.  He is also a member 
of the International Advisory Boards of Barrick Gold and 
Daimler-Chrysler.  Mr. Jordan serves on the Board of Governors for the 
Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies; a Senior Managing 
Director with Lazard Freres & Company; and a Trustee of Howard 
University.  He is a former Director for Revlon, Sara Lee, Corning, and 
Nabisco. 
 
  
He has been 
involved with several African-American civil rights, equality, and 
empowerment groups.  He served as President and Chief Executive Officer 
of the National Urban League, Incorporated; Executive Director of the 
United Negro College Fund; Director of the Voter Education Project of 
the Southern Regional Council; attorney-consultant at the U.S. Office of
 Economic Opportunity; Assistant to the Executive Director of the 
Southern Regional Council; and Georgia Field Director of the National 
Association for the Advancement of Colored People.  He also received 
numerous presidential appointments including a spot on the Secretary of 
State's Advisory Committee on South Africa. 
 
  
Karl Otto Pöhl:
 Member of the International Advisory Board of Barrick Gold, the Carlyle
 Group, former Chairman of the German Bundesbank (Central Bank) from 
1980 to 1991, and former German Governor of the IMF.  He served in 
Germany’s Economics and Finance Ministries.  He is currently a partner 
in Sal. Oppenheim Junior & Cie investment bank; member of the 
Bilderberger Group; Director of GAMCO Investors Incorporated and Gabelli
 Funds LLC; and Senior Advisor to the Ahli United Bank. 
 
  
Nathaniel 
Rothschild: International Advisory Board member of Barrick Gold and 
Co-chairman of Atticus Capital.  He is a Director of RIT Capital 
Partners PLC, Trigranit (Chairman), The Rothschild Foundation, JNR 
Limited (Chairman), and a member of the Belfer Center's International 
Council at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government.  In addition,
 Mr. Rothschild is on the International Advisory Council of the 
Brookings Institute.  Mr. Rothschild is the only son of Jacob Rothschild
 and belongs to the well-known Rothschild family of bankers. 
 
  
Andrew Young: 
Member of the International Advisory Board of Barrick Gold, Argus 
Newspapers, and Delta Airlines.  He was a close personal friend of Dr. 
Martin Luther King Junior, a prominent African-American civil rights 
activist in the U.S.  Mr. Young is a former Ambassador to the U.N. (1977
 to 1979) under President Jimmy Carter and a Georgian Congressman from 
1973 to 1977.  He served two terms as Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia where he
 was Co-Chair of the Atlanta Committee for the Centennial Olympic Games 
in 1996.  He was appointed by Bill Clinton to chair the Southern Africa 
Enterprise Development Fund.  Mr. Young is the former Chairman of 
Working Families for Wal-Mart and the Southern Africa Development Fund. 
 He was also a Director of the Drum Major Institute and a consultant for
 Nike.  In addition, Mr. Young is the former President of the National 
Council of Churches (2000 to 2001) and a former member of the National 
Security Study Group. 
 
  
He is the 
current Co-Chair and Co-Founder of GoodWorks International (GoodWorks is
 a member of the CCA; Associate of the African-American Institute; 
affiliate of the Council of Foreign Relations, and Senior Advisor of the
 National Democratic Institute for International Affairs.  Client 
corporations of GoodWorks include Barrick Gold, ChevronTexaco, Monsanto,
 Nike, and Coca-Cola.) and a founder of the CCA.  He teaches public 
affairs as a professor of policy studies at Georgia State University's 
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies.  Mr. Young is a Director of 
Argus, Host Marriott Corporation, Archer Daniels Midland, Cox 
Communications, Atlanta Market Center, the Atlanta Falcons, and Thomas 
Nelson Publishing.  He is currently a member of the Bretton Woods 
Committee, the Council of Foreign Relations, and is an active Freemason.
  Mr. Young is also currently promoting international investment in 
Rwanda and is working on creating a convention of international 
investors in Kigali that will be the largest African business summit to 
date.  It is currently scheduled for 2010. 
 
  
In addition to George Herbert Walker Bush, Barrick Gold has several other former directors with major credentials: 
Howard Baker 
Junior: Tennessee’s Republican Senator from 1967 to 1985, including two 
terms each as Senate Majority and Senate Minority Leader.  He then 
served as President Ronald Regan’s Chief of Staff in 1987 to 1988 .  
After parting ways with President Reagan, he joined Donelson, Bearman 
& Caldwell (1989 to 2001), a lobbying firm for hire that represented
 Barrick Gold.  In 2001, he was called to serve as the U.S. Ambassador 
to Japan.  In 2005, he stepped down from his post and reunited with 
Baker, Donelson, Bearman, Caldwell & Berkowitz as a full partner.  
He also joined the Advisory Board of Citigroup.  Mr. Baker also runs the
 University of Tennessee-Knoxville Center for Public Policy named in his
 honor. 
Edward Ney: 
This former director of Barrick was George Herbert Walker Bush’s 
Ambassador to Canada (1989 to 1992); a reward for running Bush’s 
presidential ad campaign in 1988.  Mr. Ney took charge of Young and 
Rubicam (acquired by WPP Group in 2000), a public relations 
agency-for-hire in 1970 and he built it into the largest firm of its 
kind.  Mr. Ney was named Chairman of the Advisory Board at 
Burson-Marsteller, a subsidiary of Young and Rubicam.  
Burston-Marsteller is also a public relations firm-for-hire who was 
hired to cover up Shell’s nefarious business policies in Nigeria.  They 
were also hired by General Jorge Videla’s violent regime in Argentina, 
and the Government of Indonesia during the time they were enacting their
 murderous policies during their occupation of East Timor.  
Burson-Marsteller also worked for Monsanto during their Bovine Growth 
Hormone scandal; lobbied for the North American Free Trade Agreement 
(NAFTA) and tobacco companies; covered for Union Carbide after the 
Bhopal disaster, and worked to improve Exxon’s image after the Valdez 
spill in Alaska.(33) 
John Trevor 
Eyton: Mr. Eyton was a Canadian Senator first appointed in 1990 by 
(then) Prime Minister Brian Mulroney.  He is a Director of Brazoil, Coca
 Cola, IQ Ludorum, Nayarit Gold, Owen Media Partners, General Motors 
Canada, IMAX, Partners for Youth, Nestle Canada, Noranda Incorporated, 
the International Chamber of Commerce (Paris), Excor-Zerust Canada, and 
Brookfield Asset Management.  Mr. Eyton is Chairman of the Canadian 
Sports Hall of Fame, Excor-Zerust Canada, Ivernia, Multi-Games 
Incorporated, Richview Resources, and Silver Bear Resources.  He is 
Governor of the Canadian Olympic Foundation, Junior Achievement Canada, 
and the Canadian Sports Hall of Fame.  Previously, he served as a Senior
 Partner at the law firm of Tory Tory Deslauriers & Binnington and 
as Chairman of EdperBrascan (now Brookfield Asset Management).  He is 
also a member of the Trilateral Commission. 
Richard Helms: 
 Director of the CIA from 1966 to 1973 under President Richard Nixon and
 Deputy Director of the CIA under John McCone.  Prior to this, he worked
 in the Office of Strategic Services, the parent department of the CIA. 
 During President Nixon’s term, he was the Ambassador to Iran.  He was 
involved with Augusto Pinochet’s coup of Chilean President Salvador 
Allende in 1973.  He also served on the board of the Bank of Credit and 
Commerce International, which was embroiled in laundering money from 
international arms dealers and terrorists.  He was a Director of the 
Carlyle Group, a consultant for Bechtel, and a member of the Council on 
Foreign Relations. 
 
  
Sources in Aru 
on the Congo-Uganda border stated “white executives” from Barrick Gold 
fly in and inspect Watsa every few months, but the company refuses to 
resume operations until fighting stops in the area.  With MONUC in full 
control of Watsa, the fighting has ceased.  MONUC’s logistics branch has
 established regular flights there.  Barrick can now try and repossess 
their mining license for the concession.  The infrastructure in Watsa, 
Doko, and Durba has been restored.  Durba has a working grinder and 
Nzoro has an active hydro-electric power source.  The Kenyan 
construction firm Civicon began work on a 108 kilometer road leading 
from the Vura border post to Watsa and should be finished in nine months
 time barring the return of armed warfare in the area.  The 
Australian/Canadian mining firm Moto Goldmines Limited provided some of 
the equipment for the job as per a contractual agreement with the 
Congolese Government.(34) 
 
  
Barrick Gold is
 a former business partner of the previously mentioned firm American 
Mineral Fields Incorporated (now named Adastra Minerals), who still owns
 their extensive concessions in Katanga Province.  Barrick was also 
partnered with the infamous and now defunct mining firm Bre-X Minerals 
Limited.(35) 
 
  
One of 
Barrick’s current business partners is South Africa-based Gold Fields.  
Gold Fields purchased Barrick’s stake in South Deep, a mine located west
 of Johannesburg they acquired when Placer Dome was purchased.  As part 
of the deal, Barrick was given over $300 million dollars (U.S.) worth of
 shares in Gold Fields.(36)  Notables associated with Gold Fields 
include Chief Executive Officer Ian Cockerill (former Executive Officer 
for Business Development and African International Operations for 
AngloGold Ashanti Limited), Director John Hopwood (former Director and 
head of the Mergers and Acquisitions Division of Ernst & Young’s 
Corporate Finance; former Executive Director of Gold Fields of South 
Africa Limited), Director Patrick Ryan (former Executive Vice President 
of Mining Operations, Development and Exploration at Phelps Dodge), 
Tokyo Sexwale (Chairman of Mvelaphanda Resources Limited), Rupert 
Pennant-Rea (Chairman of Henderson Group plc; Director of British 
American Tobacco plc, Sherrit International Corporation, First Quantum 
Minerals, and Rio Narcea; former editor for The Economist and the former
 Deputy Governor of the Bank of England) 
 
  
Barrick also 
works with Australia-based Emperor Gold, who is a minority stakeholder 
in Barrick’s Porgera mine project in Papau New Guinea.  Emperor’s 
Non-Executive Director Robert J. McDonald was a Managing Director of NM 
Rothschild & Sons (Australia) Limited and also held numerous 
positions with Rio Tinto, who also mines in Papau New Guinea.  
Non-Executive Chairman Geoffrey Campbell used to manage Merrill Lynch’s 
Investment Managers’ Gold and General Fund, one of the largest 
investment funds of its kind in the world. 
 
  
Emperor is a 
subsidiary of DRDGold Limited, based in South Africa.  Mr. Campell acts 
as its Non-Executive Chairman as well.  Director James Turk founded 
GoldMoney Network Limited, a digital gold transaction system.  He also 
worked with Chase Manhattan Bank before managing the Commodity 
Department of the Abu Dhabi Investment Authority.  Alternate Director 
Kobus Dissel hails from AngloGold. 
 
  
Another partner
 of Barrick Gold was Ashanti Goldfields Limited, a company later 
purchased by Anglo-American Corporation and renamed AngloGold-Ashanti 
Limited.  AngloGold-Ashanti is actively mining on Concession #40 in and 
around Mongbwalu, where local Anglo officials stand accused of illegally
 paying off the FNI in 2004 to mine the area in safety.  They also 
reportedly allowed the FNI and its President Floribert Njabu to use 
company vehicles, jets (chartered by Kilwa Air, who also chartered for 
MotoGoldmines Limited), lawyers, and housing.  Jean-Pierre Bemba was 
reportedly the man who suggested AngloGold work with the FNI in order to
 start mining in 2004.  William Swing was supportive of 
AngloGold-Ashanti’s exploration plans in FNI territory.  At the time, 
MONUC did not have a presence in Mongbwalu, only Bunia.  
AngloGold-Ashanti employees (at the time) who had direct contact with 
the FNI were Ashley Lassen (Head of AngloGold-Ashanti’s Uganda branch), 
Howard Fall (Project Manager in Mongbwalu), Jean-Claude Kanku 
(consultant), Desire Sangara (AngloGold-Ashanti’s Manager in the 
Kinshasa office), and Mark Hanham (Engineer).(37) 
 
  
AngloGold’s 
Chief Executive Officer Bobby Godsell (former Chairman of the World Gold
 Council) dismissed the allegations and announced they were going to 
continue work in Mongbwalu, but he promised to pull out of the Congo if 
his workers were forced to pay militias off to ensure their safety.(38) 
 In the meantime Anglo-American is looking to sell AngloGold-Ashanti.  
Newmont Mining has shown interest in a merger with AngloGold, which 
would seriously dilute Anglo-American’s ownership, but not eliminate it.
  Despite the plans to sell off AngloGold, Anglo-American still plans 
for formally open two offices in the Congo: one in Kinshasa and one in 
Lubumbashi.  Anglo-American, which posted a whopping 46% profit in 2006,
 is looking to buy back three billion dollars (U.S.) worth of shares and
 invest in copper projects in the Congo.(39) 
 
  
(Then) 
AngloGold-Ashanti’s President and Non-Executive Director Sir Samuel 
Kwesi Jonah, reportedly backed the RCD financially after L. Kabila 
revoked a mining contract from him while he was the Chief Executive 
Officer of Ashanti Goldfields Limited.  Ashanti originally bought the 
concession from Mindev for only five million dollars (U.S.).  After the 
RCD/ANC controlled the area, the RCD’s Minister of Mining Alex Thambwe 
returned the contract to Ashanti Goldfields.(40)  Sir Jonah resigned 
from AngloGold-Ashanti’s Board of Directors in February 2007. 
 
  
Sir Jonah is a 
Board Member of Lonmin, the Commonwealth African Investment Fund 
(Comafin), Transnet Limited, Anglo-American Platinum Corporation 
Limited, the Ashesi University Foundation, Equinox Minerals (Chairman), 
the uranium-producing nuclear power company UraMin Incorporated 
(Chairman), Anglo-American Corporation, Ghana Airways, Moto Goldmines 
Limited, Scharrig Mining (Chairman), Sierra Rutile Limited (Chairman), 
Sierra Resources Holding, Range Resources Limited (which holds the 
rights to all the minerals in the Somali semi-autonomous state of 
Puntland), Titanium Resources Group, Copper Resources Corporation (with 
George Arthur Forrest and George Andrew Forrest), Standard Bank Group of
 South Africa, Bayport Holding Limited, Transnet Limited, Equator 
Exploration Limited in Nigeria and São Tomé & PrÃncipé (with 
Baronness Lynda Chalker), and he is a former director of Mittal Steel 
(currently in the proverbial hot seat for a contract they signed with 
the government of Liberia) 
 
  
He is a member 
of the Advisory Council of the U.N. Secretary General's Global Compact, 
South African President Thabo Mbeki's International Investment Advisory 
Council, the African Regional Advisory Board of the London Business 
School, First Atlantic Merchant Bank, Defiance Mining, Ghanian President
 John Kufuor's Ghana Investors' Advisory Council, President Obasanjo 
Nigerian Investors’ Advisory Council, and serves as a Presidential 
Advisor to President Mohamud Muse Hersi of the Somali state of Puntland.
  He also holds an honorary British knighthood, the Star of Ghana and 
several other international awards and titles.  He recently announced 
plans to open his own firm called Jonah Mining. 
 
  
Currently, the 
Canadian company African Mineral Fields Incorporated (AMFI), recently 
purchased by Nevada-based Magnus Resources Incorporated, owns rights to a
 section of Concession #38.  African Mineral Fields also owns gold 
mining concessions in Uganda at Mwerusandu, and Mitoma, Mubende, and 
Lugazi.  Bruce Milne, AMFI’s Uganda Exploration and Country Manager, 
originally discovered the concessions Barrick Gold currently owns in 
Tanzania.  John Dixon, a consulting geologist for AMFI, once worked as a
 consultant for Placer Dome from 2000 to 2006.  Placer Dome was bought 
out by Barrick in late 2005. 
 
  
Moto Goldmines 
Limited (headed by Sir Samuel Jonah) entered into a joint venture on 
Concessions # 38 and #39 (which includes the mines in Durba, Karagwa, 
and Chauffeur) through its subsidiary Borgakim Mining SPRL (a subsidiary
 of Border Energy Limited, which is itself a subsidiary of Moto 
Goldmines Australia Limited, whose parent company is Moto Goldmines 
Limited).  Originally, a joint venture was created between the privately
 owned Orgaman SPRL and OKIMO on 10 May, 2003.  Moto Goldmines then 
bought into the existing agreement between the two and became a 60% 
owner of the property.(41) 
 
  
Moto Goldmines 
Limited was created when Moto Goldmines Australia Limited (formerly 
Equis Limited) and King Products Incorporated (formerly Wizard Lake 
Petroleum Corporation) merged in 2005.  Moto Goldmines has set up a 
complicated series of 13 subsidiaries in order to control as much of 
Concession # 38 as possible.  Border Energy Limited is a wholly owned 
holding company of Moto Goldmines Limited.  Moto Goldmines Limited 
created several subsidiaries as joint ventures with Border Energy, many 
of which are active in Ituri District and have entered into joint 
ventures of their own with OKIMO.  They include Rambi Mining SPRL, Blue 
Rose SPRL (owned by Blue Rose Investments Limited in Strathavon, South 
Africa), Kibali Gold SPRL, Amani Gold SPRL, Gorumbwa Mining SPRL, 
Tangold SPRL (owned by Greendale Universal Holdings Limited in Roadtown 
on Tortala Island, British Virgin Islands) , and the aformentioned 
Borgakim SPRL.  Orgaman SPRL was previously established in the Congo to 
import frozen fruit and is owned by Belgian William Damseaux.  Reginald 
Gillard is the company’s President and Jean-Claude Damseaux is the Vice 
President. 
 
  
The deal to 
include Moto Goldfields Limited in the contract has come under heavy 
scrutiny by the Congolese Government.  Mr. Victor Kasongo Shomary, 
OKIMO’s (then) Managing Director, never approved the contract, but three
 of OKIMO’s four directors did.  The contract was questionable because 
it had a clause that allowed OKIMO’s Directors to short-sell additional 
plots of land to Borgakim SPRL.  Additionally, the percentage of 
ownership allocated to OKIMO was only 30% and any additional joint 
ventures with another Moto Goldmines Limited subsidiaries would likely 
reduce the percentage further.  The contract also required Borgakim SPRL
 to pay for prospecting the concessions, but they have opted to rely on 
old studies (funded entirely by OKIMO) for data as a way to save 
themselves money, which is a breach of the legal agreement.  The 
Ministry of Finance has suspended all negotiations between OKIMO, 
Borgakim SPRL, and Moto Goldfields Limited.   In addition, the contracts
 of Moto Goldfields Limited’s smaller subsidiaries are under review 
because of late payments on the lease agreements.  OKIMO gave 
MotoGoldfields Limited an ultimatum: they have 75 days to invest in a 
metallurgical plant, a power station, and then begin mining in Durba, or
 else the contract is null and void.  Sir Jonah reassured his 
shareholder, stating OKIMO’s threats have “no legal value and (are) of 
no effect.”  He also accused other mining companies of souring Moto 
Goldmines’ relationship with President Kabila.(42) 
 
  
On top of all 
this, OKIMO’s management is also under investigation for stealing gold 
from Concession #38.   Mr.  Kasongo, OKIMO’s Financial Director, and its
 Sales Manager all stand accused of diverting mined gold for personal 
profit.  Mr. Kasongo was later exonerated of the charges and appointed 
President Joseph Kabila’s Deputy Minister of Mining.  The outside 
pressure on Mr. Kasongo is evident as he is now proposing to privatize 
OKIMO via the London and Toronto stock exchanges.(43)  Moto Goldmines is
 counting on Mr. Kasongo’s departure from OKIMO to allow the remaining 
directors to persuade the incoming director to cooperate with them and 
approve the contract. 
 
  
A number of 
smaller companies with leases on Concession #38 and/or #39 have not 
honored their contracts because they have been inactive on the mining 
sites.  One is the private firm Aston and Sheffield Commodities-Goldagem
 SPRL.  Aston and Sheffield is Goldagem’s parent company.  Goldagem 
itself is based in Dubai and run by Taoufik Mathlouthi, Chairman of 
Mecca Cola.  Two additional small firms that have not paid for their 
mining leases are Rambi Mining SPRL and Amani Gold SPRL. 
 
  
A large company
 that has failed to honor its mining contract in Ituri is Mwana Africa 
PLC, owned by Mwana Africa Holdings Limited based in Johannesburg, South
 Africa.  It was founded by three former Anglo-American directors in 
2003.  The firm began a joint venture project with OKIMO in June of 
2005.  Mwana Africa is also the vast majority shareholder of a joint 
venture with Anglo-American located south of Kolwezi, Fungerume, and 
Likasi in Katanga Province to mine copper and cobalt.  With copper 
prices at records highs, Mwana is agressively seeking to expand its 
project, while Anglo-American has made deliberate efforts to expand 
their copper mining assets.  They are negotiating with Gécamines to 
purchase another concession in Katanga Province to expand their project. 
 
  
Mwana Africa 
Holdings Limited was bought out by the Dublin-based (Ireland is known to
 be very leinient on corporate taxes) company African Gold PLC.  African
 Gold PLC purchased Tangold SPRL in June 2004.  Tangold SPRL itself 
owned a single portion of OKIMO Concession #38 at the time of the 
purchase and that contract is on the verge of being canceled.  Mwana 
Africa Holdings also owns part of Australia-based Gravity Diamonds 
Limited, a joint venture with BHP Billiton, Asia Marketing Limited 
(registered in Israel), Intergroup Consultants Limited, and a number of 
private diamond firms primarily registered in Antwerp, Belgium, home of 
the Diamond High Council (HRD).  Incidentally, Antwerp was also the main
 port of entry for coltan coming to Europe from the Congo during the 
coltan boom of the early 2000s.  Gravity Diamonds is active in the 
Congo’s former Kasai Province, Angola, and Australia.  Lastly, Mwana 
also owns Sibika S.A., which had a 20% stake in MIBA (the Congolese 
state-owned diamond mining entity) at the time of the purchase.44 
 
  
Mwana Africa 
Holdings also bought Bindura Nickel Corporation from AngloGold-Ashanti 
in 2004.  Bindura was chiefly active in Zimbabwe as it was a joint 
venture between AngloGold-Ashanti and the government of Zimbabwe run by 
President Robert Mugabe.  In early May 2004, Bindura’s Chief Executive 
Officer Leonard Chimimba was shot and killed outside his home in Harare 
after returning from a meeting with bank executives.  He also reportedly
 visited the Governor of Zimbabwe’s Reserve Bank (Gideon Gono) the day 
before.  The murder occurred after over half a million dollars (U.S.) 
worth of nickel disappeared from two Bindura trucks driving to South 
Africa in March.  The incident is believed to be the work of business 
insiders working with criminal syndicates in South Africa.(45) 
 
  
Mwana Africa 
recently sought to expand its operations by bidding for the Canadian 
diamond exploration company SouthernEra Diamonds (through JPMorgan and 
OZ Management), who holds joint ventures with BHP Billiton and Nyumba Ya
 Akiba SPRL, as well as their own exploration projects in the 
Kasai-Occidental and Kasai-Oriental Provinces of the Congo.  In 
addition, they own 20% of MIBA.(46) 
 
  
As can be 
expected, the company employs several well-connected individuals.  
Director Dr. Chris Jennings was an assistant vice president of 
Falconbridge Limited, a company integrated into Xstrata in August 2006. 
 He was also the Deputy Director of Botswana’s Geological Survey.  Chief
 Financial Officer Mr. Chris Reynolds spent several years with 
accounting giant (then) Price Waterhouse.  President Alasdair MacPhee 
spent 17 years with DeBeers and Mr. Michael Kritzinger, a company 
lawyers, provided council for Anglo-American, DeBeers, and 
Gencor/Billiton. 
 
  
Notables 
directing African Gold PLC are Hank Slack (Director of Anglo-American 
[1981 to 1999], Chief Executive of Minorco [1991 to 1999], current 
Director of Terra Industries and Engelhard Corporation, former Director 
of Solomon Brothers and SAB Miller), John Teeling (Chairman of Minco, 
Petrel resources, Pan Andean Resources, and African Diamonds), Oliver 
Baring (Executive Chairman of the First Africa Group; former 
Anglo-American Director; current Chairman of Cluff Mining PLC; 
non-executive Director of Merrill Lynch World Mining Trust and the 
Tiedmann Trust Company, and advisor for the The Senient Resources Fund). 
 
  
Another major 
player is African Gold’s Chief Executive Officer Kalaa Mpinga.  Mr. 
Mpinga is the son of a former Prime Minister and nephew of Mr. 
Pierre-Victor Mpoyo (One of L. Kabila’s advisors; the former Congolese 
Minister of Economy; former Minister of State; owner of the Central 
Mining Group, and business partner of Zimbabwean Billy Rautenbach, the 
Director of Gécamines in 1998).  Kalaa received his Agricultural 
Development and Economics degrees at the University of California-Davis 
and McGill University (Canada) respectively.  After graduating, he went 
to work for the Bechtel Corporation in San Francisco.  In 1991, he left 
to join LTA Limited, which was owned by Anglo-American Corporation.  In 
1997, he was promoted to Executive Director of Anglo-American’s mining 
division and worked in the Congo’s Ministry of Economy under his uncle. 
 To this day, Mr. Mpinga continues to hold strong ties with 
Anglo-Amcerican.(47)  From 1998 to 2000, Mr. Mpinga was a Patron and 
Board Member of the African Business Roundtable and he was also an 
Executive Director of New Business Africa.  In 2001, he was one a 
founding member of Mwana Africa Holdings.   
 
  
He currently is
 a Director of Group Five Limited (a huge construction firm), and 
GijimaAST, a technology corporation based in South Africa.  In addition,
 he is Chairman of Bindura Nickel Corporation.  Many of Mr. Mpinga’s 
recent projects are funded by Lansdowne Partners Ltd. and Marshall Wace 
LLP.(48)  On a personal note, Mr. Mpinga is an open admirer of the late 
DeBeers/Anglo-American patriarch Harry Oppenheimer, calling him, “A 
great African, a man with a vision for the continent and indeed a 
pioneer of African renaissance.”(49)  
 
  
David 
Barouski is an African Affairs researcher with a focus on Central 
Africa.  He was the co-recipient of a Project Censored award in 2006 and
 is a regular contibutor to Znet.  His work has appeared in Z Magazine, 
Waheen Online, the Somaliland Times, and Congo Panorama.  He is the 
author of the book, “Laurent Nkundabatware, his Rwandan Allies, and the 
ex-ANC Mutiny: Chronic Barriers to Lasting Peace in the Democratic 
Republic of the Congo,” which he traveled to the Democratic Republic of 
the Congo and Rwanda to research. 
 
1 “Congo’s Coltan Rush,” BBC News.  1 August 2001. 
3  Reno, William.  “Sovereignity and Personal Rule in Zaire.”  African Studies Quarterly.  Volume 1, Issue 3.  May 1997. 
4 “New Leaders Take Africa Into Their Own Hands,” Sam Kiley.  The Times.  20 May, 1997. 
5  Madsen, 
Wayne.  “Genocide and Operations in Africa: .”  Lampeter, Ceredigion, 
Wales, United Kingdom: Edwin Mellen Press, Limited.  1999.  pg. 283, 
300-301. 
6  Ibid.  pg. 
281; Baracyetse, Pierre, Loudiebo, Alexandre.  “The Geopolitical Stakes 
of the International Mining Companies in the Democratic Republic of the 
Congo (Ex-Zaire).”  English Translation.  2000. 
7  Madsen, 
Wayne.  “Genocide and Operations in Africa: .”  Lampeter, Ceredigion, 
Wales, United Kingdom: Edwin Mellen Press, Limited.  1999.  pg. 280-283. 
8  Baracyetse, 
Pierre, Loudiebo, Alexandre.  “The Geopolitical Stakes of the 
International Mining Companies in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 
(Ex-Zaire).”  English Translation.  2000. 
9 “Friends in High Places,” Richard C. Morais.  Forbes.  10 August, 1998. 
10 “U.S. Firms Stake Claims in Zaire’s War,” Cindy Shiner.  CNN.  17 April, 1997. 
11  Madsen, 
Wayne.  “Genocide and Operations in Africa: .”  Lampeter, Ceredigion, 
Wales, United Kingdom: Edwin Mellen Press, Limited.  1999.  pg. 67, 
280-283. 
12  Ibid.  pg. 70. 
13  Ibid.  pg. 
283;  “Firm From Clinton's Home Town Has Deal With Zaire Rebel Chief,” 
Christopher Ruddy.  NewsMax.  16 May, 1997;  “Congo-Zaire,” Conor de 
Lion.  Global Finance.  June 1997. 
14 “U.S. Firms Stake Claims in Zaire’s War,” Cindy Shiner.  CNN.  17 April, 1997. 
15 “DeBeers Bows to Zaire Rebels,” Stefaans Brümmer, Chris McGreal.  Mail & Guardian.  18 April, 1997. 
16  United States Department of the Interior.  “The Mineral Industry of Zaire.”  George J. Coakley.  1997. 
17  United States Department of the Interior.  “The Mineral Industry of Congo (Kinshasa).”  George J. Coakley.  1998. 
18 “Canadian Companies in the Congo and OECD Guidelines.”  Corporate Knights.  Issue CK 16.  5 June, 2006. 
19 “Gold Producer Buys Barrick Properties,” Las Vegas Review-Journal.  17 May, 1998. 
21  United 
States House of Representatives Subcommittee on International Operations
 and Human Rights of the Committee on International Relations.  
“Suffering and Despair: Humanitarian Crisis in the Congo.”  One Hundred 
Seventh Congress, Session 1.  Serial No. 107–16.  17 May, 2001. 
22 “Shifting 
Sands: Oil Exploration in the Rift Valley and the Congo Conflict.”  
Dominic Johnson.  Pole Institute.  13 March, 2003.  pg. 9-10. 
23  Private Interview.  2006. 
24 “Don Doyle 
Explains ‘Blanchard vs. Barrick and J.P. Morgan’.”  Jay Taylor.  Jay 
Taylor’s Gold and Technology Stocks.  Volume 22, Number 15.  3 January, 
2004. 
26  UK Defence Firm Lobbied Minister to Drop Corruption Probe: Report,” Agence France Pressé.  16 December, 2006. 
29  Madsen, 
Wayne.  “Genocide and Operations in Africa: .”  Lampeter, Ceredigion, 
Wales, United Kingdom: Edwin Mellen Press, Limited.  1999.  pg. 74. 
31  Palast, 
Greg.  “The Best Democracy Money Can Buy.”  New York, New York: Plume 
(Penguin Group).  1st American Edition.  2003.  pg. 93. 
35 “The Western Heart of Darkness: Mineral-Rich Congo Ravaged by Genocide and Plunder,” Asad Ismi.  CCPA Monitor.  October 2001. 
37 “The Curse of Gold: Democratic Republic of the Congo.”  Human Rights Watch.  26 April, 2005;  Private Interview.  2006. 
39 “Anglo American Profits Grow 46%,” BBC News.  21 February, 2007;  
“Anglo $3bn Share Buyback in 2007,” Allan Seccombe.  Mining MX.  21 
February, 2007.   http://www.miningmx.com/mining_fin/.htm;  “Stability Tempts Mining Companies Back to Congo,” Rebecca Bream.  Financial Times.  21 February, 2007.  
40  Madsen, Wayne.  “Genocide and Operations in Africa: .”  Lampeter, 
Ceredigion, Wales, United Kingdom: Edwin Mellen Press, Limited.  1999.  
pg. 305. 
42 “Business Borgakim-OKIMO: Exact Contours of a Contract That Wants to 
‘Kill’ Kilo-Moto for Good!,” DigitalCongo3.0.  English Translation.  18 
January, 2007.   http://www.digitalcongo.net/article/40343;
  “OKIMO, A Very Annoyed Trade-Union Delegation!,” La Prospérité.  
English Translation.  19 January, 2007;  “Mining Conflict 
OKIMO-Borgakim: Anxious Interference From Minister Balamage!,” 
DigitalCongo 3.0.  English Translation.  30 December, 2006.   http://www.digitalcongo.net/article/39948;  “OKIMO Says Clock is Ticking on Moto,” David McKay.  MiningMX.  16 February, 2007.   http://www.miningmx.com/juniors/.htm;
  “Update on the Moto Gold Project.”  Moto Goldmines Limited.  Press 
Release.  26 February, 2007;  “Moto’s Jonah in Congo Parley,” David 
McKay.  Mining MX.  29 March, 2007.   http://www.miningmx.com/gold_silver/.htm.  
43 “Congo Accuses Canadian Mining Firm of ‘Cheating’,” The East African.  12 March, 2007. 
44 “Year in Review 2006: Democratic Republic of the Congo July to 
December.”  Great Lakes Center for Strategic Studies.  2006.  pg. 24. 
45 “Mining Boss Shot Dead,” Daily Mirror.  12 May, 2004. 
47 “Mpinga Still in Cahoots With Anglo,” African Mining Intelligence.  N°149.  7 February, 2007. 
48 “Fertile Ground: Hedge Funds Travel to Africa,” Alistair MacDonald.  The Wall Street Journal.  6 October, 2006. 
49 “Tribute to Harry Oppenheimer: Pioneer of African Renaissance,” Kalaa Mpinga.  Daily Dispatch.  29 August, 2000. 
 
Table Bay Hotel drama (Katanga mineral riches in play in Cape Town) 
(Source: Mineweb) 
Caesar's wife, in the form of Cynthia Carroll, nearly rubs shoulders 
with Niko Shefer, a carnivorous rum runner fresh from a Big Shark Hunt. 
      Author: Barry Sergeant 
Posted:  Wednesday , 06 Feb 2008 
      
JOHANNESBURG -   
You get seal-swallowing Great White Sharks offshore the environs of Cape
 Town, but this week the city opened its wind-punched arms to an annual 
international carnival of decadence and bad taste known as the mining 
Indaba. At one point, Cynthia Carroll, the CEO of Anglo American (AAL 
LN, £28.30 a share), once the world's leading mining company, nearly 
brushed shoulders with Niko Shefer, a rum runner who had just returned 
from a Big Shark Hunt.  
This so nearly happened in the foyer of the Table Bay Hotel, Cape Town's
 version of Dubai's decadent seven-star Burj Al Arab Hotel. Shefer was 
followed by a flapping entourage of motley characters, most of them 
Congolese, but also including a pony-tailed paleface who looked as if he
 might have just hit town with some interesting business from Mexico. 
The whispers around the hotel were that Shefer had hired 10 rooms in the
 Table Bay Hotel for the four day duration of the Indaba, along with 
five big fat depraved limousines. Shefer's spokesman, at last count, one
 Chris Vick, was not taking calls to confirm or deny the details of 
Shefer's post-shark attack on the Table Bay Hotel.   
Vick is known across the planet for his impassioned appeals that the world rinses its memory of Shefer's criminal  conviction
 on corruption charges, way back in 1989.  Well, everyone's naturally 
forgotten that, but it's difficult to erase the memory of Shefer being 
declared a personal non grata in the Democratic Republic of the Congo 
(DRC), just six months ago, after his name was connected to a tangled 
would-be  uranium deal. Nobody, but nobody, should let Shefer near that stuff.   
Carroll, who is above suspicion and whiter than Caesar's wife, gave a  speech
 that said nothing negative about anything in the world, scarcely 
recognising last month's meltdown at Eskom, one of the greatest 
institutional failures in African history. In another lily-white speech,
 this one dripping with schmooze, Victor Kasongo, DRC Vice Minister of 
Mines, outlined a "new" plan to "fast track" solutions to his country's 
review of mining contracts. The media happily doled out the story, the 
biggest one at this year's Indaba, to their audiences.  
Victor Kasongo is nothing more than a runner for the Holy Trio: DRC 
president Joseph Kabila, along with his closest adviser, Augustine 
Katumba Mwanke, and a notoriously litigious paleface who can be handily 
referred to as The Real Shark Hunt. Kasongo's job down in Cape Town was 
to sound like a vegetarian Great White Shark, but always looking like a 
Great White Shark craving fresh meat. On Wednesday morning he bored 
hundreds of people to tears and sleep over a breakfast that should have 
been depraved and decadent and highly meaningful.  
In the Real Shark Hunt, mining companies backed by billions of dollars 
of Western capital are being kicked around like packs of rats and other 
assorted small vermin.   
A few weeks back, Toronto-listed Katanga Mining (KAT CN, C$13.02) - 
currently merging with London-listed Nikanor - (NKR LN, £3.99) was 
forced by DRC parastatal Gécamines (La Générale des Carrières et des 
Mines) to  surrender
 two of its valuable properties into a Chinese deal. Katanga Mining has 
admitted to the deal, but has politely declined to explain what it 
received as a quid pro quo. 
And so it goes. There is no end of decadent and bizarre deals going down
 in Katanga Province , which houses the majority of the DRC's copper, 
cobalt, zinc and uranium riches. In a July 18 2006 report to the UN's 
Security Council, the Group of Experts on the DRC raised serious 
questions over concession rights held by individuals of unknown or 
questionable standing. Noting that the DRC's Mining Cadastre listed 
2,144 mining and quarrying concessions, the Group of Experts argued that
 "an undetermined number appear to be held by concessionaires affiliated
 with investors whose personal and professional integrity is doubtful". 
  
This lack of transparency, the Group of Experts argued, provided "hiding
 places for sanctioned individuals, financiers of embargo violators and 
for other individuals who simply do not meet the standards of the Code 
Minier". As an example of a "due diligence failure", the report referred
 to Camec (CFM LN , £0.45), and noted that Conrad Muller "Billy" 
Rautenbach, a major shareholder in Camec, was wanted by the authorities 
of South Africa for fraud and theft. Rautenbach has ostensibly sold Boss
 Mining (concessions 467 and 469) and also concessions 1590-1605 to 
Camec. Rautenbach was last year declared a persona non grata in the DRC.
 Like Shefer, he is desperately trying to have the ban lifted. Like 
Shefer, he is wont to try and do extraordinary things, but he is 
excluded from shark hunts in landlocked Zimbabwe. 
These days, Camec has joined forces with an entity known as Prairie to 
list the "Mukondo JV", representing what may well be the world's richest
 cobalt deposit, on a big stock exchange. Among the cash raised from the
 would-be listing, a minimum of $400m will go to Prairie, and $170m to 
Camec. This week, a  coalition of NGOs published audit reports - signed by Ernst & Young - of four of the entities going into the Mukondo JV,  Boss Mining,  Kababankola Mining Company,  Mukondo Mining, and  La Société Minière de Kabolela et de Kipese sprl,
 insisting that prosecutors and stock exchange regulators in Europe and 
North America carefully examine the audits "to consider whether there is
 sufficient evidence to trigger prosecutions".   
Back on due diligence failures, the UN Group of Experts report also 
referred to Ruashi Mining (concessions 627, 578, and 72), noting that 
Shefer, "ex-convict and currently indicted by the authorities of South 
Africa, is the controlling shareholder of Ruashi Mining". Under cover of
 layers of entities, including Sentinelle Global Investments, Shefer 
"sold" Ruashi to Metorex (MTX SJ, R19.66), and later realized benefits 
to the tune of around $400m, according to individuals familiar with the 
situation. After events that unfolded this week, Metorex could show its 
class by explaining one or two things in and around  Compagnie Miniere du Sud Katanga. 
There is also the  would-be
 swindle of Kalukundi, a glorious copper-cobalt asset that belongs to 
Africo (ARL CN, C$1.69). As for The Real Shark Hunt, the free 
speculation amid the depravity and decadence of this year's Indaba 
carnival was that the people who know the most about that story are 
likely to be Glencore's Ivan Glasenberg and Lloyd Pengilly of JP Morgan 
Cazenove.   
Then there is Moïse Katumbi Chapwe, governor of Katanga Province, but his is one of many stories for another day.
 
   | Selected DRC/Zambia copper miners |      |    
   
  |    
Stock  
 |    
From 
 |    
Value 
 |    
   
  |    
price 
 |    
high* 
 |    
US$bn 
 |    
   | First Quantum |    
C$75.43 
 |    
-33.9% 
 |    
5.12 
 |    
   | Equinox |    
C$4.65 
 |    
-33.6% 
 |    
2.62 
 |    
   | Katanga Mining |    
C$13.02 
 |    
-53.6% 
 |    
2.57 
 |    
   | Nikanor |    
£3.99 
 |    
-36.6% 
 |    
1.10 
 |    
   | Camec |    
£0.45 
 |    
-44.2% 
 |    
0.99 
 |    
   | Metorex |    
R19.66 
 |    
-35.3% 
 |    
0.93 
 |    
   | Anvil |    
C$12.70 
 |    
-37.5% 
 |    
0.90 
 |    
   | Teal |    
C$4.75 
 |    
-22.1% 
 |    
0.26 
 |    
   | Copper Resources |    
£1.87 
 |    
-0.5% 
 |    
0.22 
 |    
   | ZCI |    
R11.35 
 |    
-60.8% 
 |    
0.19 
 |    
   | Mwana Africa |    
£0.36 
 |    
-56.9% 
 |    
0.18 
 |    
   | African Copper |    
£0.53 
 |    
-47.5% 
 |    
0.14 
 |    
   | Zambezi Resources |    
£0.15 
 |    
-50.0% 
 |    
0.05 
 |    
   | Africo |    
C$1.69 
 |    
-64.4% 
 |    
0.05 
 |    
   | African Eagle |    
£0.10 
 |    
-40.6% 
 |    
0.03 
 |    
   | Simberi |    
C$0.06 
 |    
-45.5% 
 |    
0.01 
 |    
   
  |    
  |    
-41.4% 
 |    
  |    
   | Diversified |    
  |    
  |    
  |    
   | BHP Billiton |    
£15.97 
 |    
-15.9% 
 |    
179.46 
 |    
   | Freeport-McMoRan |    
$85.91 
 |    
-28.5% 
 |    
32.81 
 |    
   | Vedanta |    
£19.31 
 |    
-20.2% 
 |    
10.90 
 |    
   | Lundin |    
C$7.93 
 |    
-49.9% 
 |    
3.10 
 |    
   * 12-month high 
 
 |    
  |    
  |  
 
 
  
Israel and the Ongoing Holocaust in Congo (Part 1) 
  
by Keith Harmon Snow / February 9th, 2008 
  
Maurice 
Templesman is one of the top funders of Barrack Obama and Hillary 
Clinton and the Democratic Party. Templesman was the unofficial 
ambassador to the Congo (Zaire) for years, but a new Israeli-American 
tycoon has replaced him. In the world of bling bling and bling bang, 
some things change, some stay the same. The CIA, the MOSSAD, the big 
mining companies, the offshore accounts and weapons deals—all hidden by 
the Western media. The holocaust in Central Africa has claimed some six 
to ten million people in Congo since 1996, with 1500 people dying 
daily.1 But while the Africans are the victims of perpetual Holocaust, 
the persecutors hide behind history, complaining that they are the 
persecuted, or pretending they are the saviors. Who is responsible? 
  
For 
Israeli-American Dan Gertler, business in blood drenched Congo is not 
merely business, it is a quest for the Holy Grail. Young Dan Gertler 
goes nowhere—does nothing—without the spiritual guidance of 
Brooklyn-born Rabbi Chaim Yaakov Leibovitch, a personal friend of 
Condoleeza Rice.2 Gertler and Leibovitch are two of the principals 
behind a diamond mining company, Emaxon Finance Corporation, involved in
 the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC). Gertler and gang won the 
majority rights to the diamonds from the state mining company, Société 
Minière de Bakwange, MIBA, found near the government-controlled town of 
Mbuji-Mayi, the rough diamond capital of the world. 
  
Emaxon Finance 
Corp. has apparently out-maneuvered diamond competitors, especially the 
big rivals Energem and De Beers. Energem is one of the many shady mining
 companies connected to Anthony Teixeira, a Portuguese born businessman 
now residing in South Africa whose daughter married Congolese warlord 
Jean-Pierre Bemba. The warlord’s deadly battle in Congo in March 2007 
was a bid between rival agents—Jean-Pierre Bemba and Joseph Kabila—to be
 the black gatekeeper for the mining cartels run by dynastic families 
like Templesman, Oppenheimer, Mendell, Forrest, Blattner, Hertzov, 
Gertler and Steinmetz, and for companies like NIKANOR, whose stock 
prices rose early in July 2006 in expectation of a July 30th “win” for 
Joseph Kabila.3 Africa Confidential called President Kabila’s 2003 visit
 to the Bush White House a “coup” for the Israeli diamond magnates Dan 
Gertler and Beny Steinmetz. 
  
Canadian-based 
Energem, formerly DiamondWorks, is owned by British mercenary Tony 
Buckingham and its director/shareholders include Mario and Tony 
Teixeira, J.P. Morgan, and Gertler’s partner Israeli-American Beny 
Steinmetz (50%).4 Through subsidiary Branch Energy, the 
Energem-DiamondWorks gang has perpetuated war in 11 African countries.5 
In December 2007, Energem re-launched itself on the London Stock Market 
with the newly laundered image of a renewable energy company. Regarding 
diamonds, it said only it “had decided to give up exploration rights in 
the Central African Republic.”6 The Energem spokesman explained that 
Tony Teixeira “had a clean bill of health” etc., etc. Of course, Energem
 “quit” the C.A.R. because Jean-Pierre Bemba marched his troops into 
C.A.R., where they raped and pillaged widely.7 Energem is still 
operating in Congo, but Dan Gertler is the new, unofficial ambassador to
 the Congo for the George W. Bush gang. 
  
Gertler and 
partners like Beny and Danny Steinmetz, Nir Livnat, Chaim Leibovitz and 
Yaakov Neeman run a hornet’s nest of companies involved in African 
hotspots, including: Dan Gertler International (DGI), Steinmetz Global 
Resources, International Diamond Industries, NIKANOR and Global 
Enterprises Corporate. 
  
“Dan Gertler is
 ‘the new kid on the block,’” writes Yossi Melman in Israel’s Haaretz 
news. “Bold, sophisticated, brutal, he is an adventurer with a short 
fuse.” Haaratz confirmed that Dan Gertler owns a complex network of 
interconnected companies, often registered in offshore tax havens and 
involved in India, Russia, Belgium and the United States, and that Dan 
Gertler is looking to God for guidance.8 
  
THOU SHALT NOT STEAL 
  
“In the diamond
 industry,” Melman wrote, “Gertler is considered something of an odd 
bird. He maintains few ties with the other merchants and is not very 
sociable… Alongside his business affairs, most of his energy is 
channeled into matters of faith. He is a donor to religious institutions
 and from time to time makes a pilgrimage to the rabbi he most admires, 
Rabbi David Abuhatzeira, from Nahariya, in order to consult with him and
 receive his blessing. Gertler is surrounded mostly by religious people 
and laces his speech liberally with praise to God.”8 
  
In 2003, 
Condoleeza Rice, then Assistant to President Bush for National Security 
Affairs, introduced Dan Gertler and Chaim Leibovitch to U.S. official 
Jendayi Frazer, a Harvard Kennedy School affiliate and former National 
Security Council agent focused on Africa. On December 6, 2006, Frazer, 
then Assistant Secretary of State for African Affairs, was one of seven 
special Bush delegates sent to the inauguration of Congo’s newly 
installed President Joseph Kabila in Kinshasa.9 
  
When Dan 
Gertler and Chaim Leibovitch and their friends visit the luxury Gertler 
villa in Lumumbashi, the capital of Katanga, Congo’s large southern 
province, their kosher meals arrive by private plane from Kinshasa. The 
special executive jet that flies their kosher meals a few hundred miles 
over the roadless Congo costs some $US 23,000 per trip.10 
  
The average 
income for Congolese citizens each year—if they survive it—is about $95.
 Shootings at mining facilities and diamond mines are common, land is 
stolen from Congolese people, strikes are crushed by security forces 
that companies are partnered with, and black overseers of state terror 
routinely arrest and torture any vocal opposition—and sometimes 
disappear them—in support of white bosses. The Société Minière de 
Bakwange—MIBA— and the diamond fields of Mbuji-Mayi in Congo have a long
 history of bloodshed backed by Western powers, including Israel, from 
the beginning.11 Amnesty International points out that not a single 
state agent has ever been prosecuted for the extrajudicial executions of
 suspected “illegal” miners in Mbuji-Mayi.12 
  
After a century
 of exploitation and slavery, we find MIBA consistently withholding 
payment of salaries to starving Congolese laborers and middle managers 
for months at a time. April and May 2007 saw strikes and protests 
leading to the Kabila government’s arbitrary arrest, detention and 
torture of trade union organizers like Leon Ngoy Bululu; police have 
also shot protestors.13 So-called ‘illegal’ diamond 
workers—disenfranchised local Congolese people forced into “criminal” 
activities to survive—were summarily executed on MIBA concessions in 
Mbuji-Mayi. MIBA security guards have also been sniping unemployed 
diamond miners.14 
  
Meanwhile, Dan 
Gertler’s kosher meals depart Kinshasa, the capital of the big Congo, 
through the arrangements of Rabbi Chlomo Bentolila, high priest of the 
Chabad of Central Africa. Rabbi Chlomo Bentolila has been a Kinshasa 
Rabbi since 1991, and he was a spiritual force who survived the 
terrorism of the old dinosaur, Mobutu Sese Seko, the way most elites 
did: by working with him. Rabbi Bentolila is a member of the Chabad 
Lubavitch Global Emissary Network, headquartered in Brooklyn, New York, 
and his wife Miriam is the sister of Rabbi Mena’hem Hadad, a high priest
 in Brussels.15 
  
“Kosher does 
not mean that a Rabbi blesses the food,” Rabbi Betolila corrected me, 
“but rather that the food was supervised by a Rabbinical Thora [sic] 
authority who sees that the ingredients were in accordance with the laws
 of Kashrut expressed in the Bible (Leviticus and Deuteronomy).”16 
  
Dan Gertler 
often flies people into Congo, on his private jet, for sacred Jewish 
rituals. For the Bar Mitsvah of Rabbi Chlomo Bentolila’s son Binyamin 
Avrahim in June 2005, guests included eminent Rabbis, Hassidic singer 
Yoni Shlomo and special orchestra Yossef Brami, all arriving in “special
 flights” from Israel, New York and Brussels. The reception was held at 
the luxurious and exclusive Memling Hotel. Joseph Kabila sent a sizeable
 delegation but did not attend: his closest advisers provided a blessing
 on his behalf.17 
  
The Gertler, 
Steinmetz and Templesman interests are advanced in part through the 
support of the Committee of the Jewish Community of Kinshasa—le Comité 
de la Communauté Israélite—that is tightly coordinated with the power 
structure in Kinshasa to exert influence and assure control of 
Israeli-Belgian-Anglo-American interests over the geopolitical arena. 
  
From June 
26-30, 2007, the Communaute Israelite de Kinshasa received a visit from 
the Israeli Ambassador Yaakov Revah, director of the Africa Department 
of the Israeli Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Revah also flew to 
Lumumbashi for meetings with Dan Gertler and his agents, including 
Moishe (Moses) Katumbi, the Governor of Katanga, and they most likely 
enjoyed a lovely, $23,000 kosher meal sent from the Chabad in 
Kinshasa.18 The Communaute Israelite de Kinshasa maintains very intimate
 political relations with President Joseph Kabila’s PPRD party, the 
People’s Party for Reconstruction and Democracy. On March 1, 2006, in a 
formal ceremony, the President of the Communaute Israelite de Kinshasa, 
Ashlan Piha, was awarded the Congo’s Medal of Civil Merit. 
  
THOU SHALT NOT COVET 
  
Before his 
assassination on January 16, 2001, Laurent Desire Kabila—the President 
of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC)—made a deal with the Gertler 
gang that would play out in favor of the current President Joseph Kabila
 and, it seems, be a central factor in relation to both Congo’s ongoing 
war and the bloody warlord’s battle in Kinshasa in March 2007.19 
  
Back in 2000, 
former Congolese president Laurent Kabila offered a monopoly on 
Congolese diamonds, and 88% of the proceeds, to Gertler’s International 
Diamond Industries (IDI) in exchange for Israeli military assistance to 
his new government.20 Top Congolese military officials apparently flew 
to Israel in 2000 to negotiate the deal. Gertler pledged military 
assistance to President Laurent Kabila through top Israeli officials.21 
  
The original 
Gertler-Kabila deal fell through after Laurent Kabila was assassinated 
for not cooperating with the Great White Fathers of industry (January 
2001), but Gertler and Leibovitch and their disciples formed another 
company, Dan Gertler International, and advanced their Congo plan.22 By 
2002 Gertler’s company was the leading exporter of Congolese gems, 
controlling a diamond mining franchise worth about $US 1 billion 
annually.23 
  
In 2003, the 
mighty Congolese diamond parastatal Societe Miniere De Bakwanga 
(MIBA)—which has been forever controlled by the Great White Fathers in 
Belgium, Israel and America—signed an exclusive contract with Gertler’s 
startup company, Emaxon Finance International. The deal involved 
Israeli’s Foreign Defense Assistance and Defense Export Organization 
(SIBAT), and high-level Israeli defense and intelligence officials. 
Gertler and his buddies reportedly bribed Congolese officials and 
Angolan generals who, on and off, have commanded Angolan Army troops 
protecting Kinshasa, Congo’s capital.21,24 
  
Security for 
mining operations in Congo is provided by exclusive security companies 
like Overseas Security Services (OSS) one of the many DRC interests of 
Belgian billionaire tycoon Philippe de Moerloose. A member of the 
Kinshasa elite, de Moerloose supplies jets and other presidential toys 
to DRC President Kabila. In 2006, President Joseph Kabila’s campaign 
helicopter was at the centre of a legal battle involving Philippe de 
Moerloose.25 De Moerloose’s companies operated in Mobutu’s Zaire from at
 least 1991, backing state terrorism and Western corporate plunder that 
was rendered invisible by the Western media. De Moerloose is also an 
adviser to European Union (EU) Commissioner—and diamantaire—Louis 
Michel. 
  
Dan Gertler and
 Philippe de Moerloose were, reportedly, the only two white men who 
attended the wedding of Joseph Kabila and the two clearly share 
interests in “security” provided by OSS at MIBA and elsewhere in Congo. 
The April 2003 secret agreement signed between the Gertler/Steinmetz 
company Emaxon Finance and the Kabila government involved MIBA and two 
de Moerloose companies, OSS-Congo and Demimpex, and other firms. 
  
Overseas 
Security Services (OSS) operations are apparently grounded in the 
experience of top expatriate security operatives formerly involved with 
the biggest security firm in Mobutu’s Zaire.26 According to OSS public 
relations materials, “these persons have a not unimportant experience in
 the safety of this country.”26 Providing mine security, body-guard and 
protection services, OSS operates in Burundi, Ivory Coast, Rwanda, 
Dubai, South Africa, Republic of Congo (Brazzavile) and Belgium, placing
 them in cahoots with all sides warring and plundering eastern Congo 
today.27 
  
Emaxon Finance 
International is a real gem, one of these octopuses of mining tangled up
 with interlocking companies and subsidiaries based in specious 
geographical offshore “tax havens” that work to shield from prosecution 
people who are responsible for money laundering, weapons and drugs 
operations, assassinations and other terrorism. 
  
NIKANOR is 
registered as an Isle of Man (UK) company, an offshore tax haven that 
helps to conceal criminal activities and maximize profits. NIKANOR 
directors include Dan Kurtzer, former U.S. ambassador to Israel 
(2001-2005) and Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for 
Intelligence and Research under Madeleine Albright. NIKANOR partners 
include Mende and Moshe Gertner [sic], Israeli property tycoons with 
vast holdings in London who control 22 percent of NIKANOR. Another 
partner is Israeli-born Nir Livnat, managing director of 
Johannesburg-based Ascot Diamonds, a member of the Steinmetz Group of 
Diamond Companies, and a principal involved in numerous U.S.-based 
businesses from Miami to New York.28 
  
THOU SHALT NOT BEAR FALSE WITNESS 
  
Back in 2001, 
when the Gertler enterprises surfaced in dirty diamond deals, public 
relations was handled by Lior Chorev, the “Special Strategic and 
Communications Consultant” to International Diamond Industries (IDI), 
and Chorev continued in this role to support Dan Gertler businesses.29 
Today, Lior Chorev is partnered with the brothers Yuval and Eyal Arad as
 director-owners of the Israeli marketing and public relations firm, 
ARAD Communications.30 
  
“We do work for
 Mr. Gertler on some of his business issues,” said Lior Chorev.31 ARAD’s
 many clients include Dan Gertler companies, Los Angeles-based Coral 
Diamonds and an Israeli aeronautics weaponry manufacturer producing 
Unmanned Aerospace Vehicles (UAVs)—robotic weapons and intelligence 
platforms like those being used against the people of Congo today.32 As a
 political strategist, Lior Chorev has worked for Israeli Prime Minister
 Ariel Sharon and current Prime Minister Ehud Olmert.33 He has also 
participated in Israel-NATO defense planning conferences.34 
  
Dan Gertler is 
close to Israeli politicians, especially Avigdor Lieberman, head of the 
right-wing Yisrael Beiteinu party, and he is very close to diamantaire 
Beny Steinmetz, a good friend of Prime Minister Ehud Olmert. Gertler’s 
inseperable friend, Chaim Leibovitz, is also very close to Lieberman, 
and was “a regular fixture” in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s 
offices.35 
  
Beny Steinmetz 
is considered to be one of the richest billionaires in Israel. The 
Steinmetz Group, controlled with his brother Daniel, is one of the 
biggest clients of the de Beers diamond syndicate. Steinmetz is also 
involved in an Israeli real estate group that purchased the assets of 
the British Haslemere real estate company for $1.46 billion. Steinmetz’s
 real estate partners include the billionaire Israeli investors David 
and Simon Reuben, and the Saudi Arabian Olayan Group, an investment 
company that is deeply connected with Bechtel Corporation.36 The 
Steinmetz web site map of operations hides their involvement in war-torn
 Congo.37 
  
Seems Dan 
Gertler’s land grabs and exclusion in Congo have a lot in common with 
the current crimes against humanity being committed by Israel through 
its illegal partition in the Middle East. On January 3, 2008, the 
Jerusalem Post reported that Lior Chorev was an integral part of past 
Prime Minister Ariel Sharon’s advisers, and he was recently quoted to 
say that even though Sharon did not get to finalize Israel’s final 
borders (he suffered a debilitating stroke in 2006), the route of the 
security fence—which he decided—would ultimately serve as the basis for 
the border and as Sharon’s lasting legacy.38 
  
“He felt he 
needed to set the border because he didn’t trust the younger 
generations,” Chorev was quoted to say. “He knew the fence route by 
heart and the reason for every stretch of land being on one side or the 
other.”38 
  
In 2003, the 
U.N. Panel of Experts on war in Congo revealed that Emaxon Finance 
International is controlled by Israeli diamond traders Chaim Leibovitz 
and Dan Gertler.39 Emaxon lists as its address an office in Montreal, 
Canada, but Emaxon’s majority shareholder is listed as FTS Worldwide, a 
nebulous global corporation whose business address is that of a firm of 
lawyers, Mossack Fonseca & Company, in Panama City. FTS Worldwide is
 registered with the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission to lawyer Andre
 Zolty of Geneva Switzerland. A copy of the MIBA-Emaxon contract was 
signed on 13 April 2003 by Israeli-Americans Yaakov Neeman and Chaim 
Leibovitz.40 
  
Yaakov Neeman 
is a founding partner of Herzog, Fox and Neeman, Tel Aviv, one of 
Israel’s top law firms, and he has held Israeli government cabinet and 
ministerial positions.41 Neeman is on the Advisory Board of Markstone 
Capital Group, a very influential group of investment bankers, with Eli 
Hurvitz. On the board of Israel’s Teva Pharmaceutical Industries with 
Eli Hurvitz is Northrup-Grumman director Philip Frost.42 Both Philip 
Frost and Maurice Templesman are top-level councilors for the American 
Stock Exchange. Eli Hurvitz sat on the International Advisory Counsel of
 Harvard University’s Belfer Center, 2002-2005, during the period when 
the Belfer Center and their intelligence operative Robert Rotberg 
formalized the “Kimberley Process” to officially whitewash blood 
diamonds.43 Yakov Neeman is also a governor of the World Zionist 
Organization and Jewish Agency for Israel. 
  
One of the main
 objectives of the Kimberley Process, and the Harvard Belfer Center’s 
role, was to protect the South African Oppenheimer and De Beers diamond 
cartels and their leading buyers and agents like Maurice Templesman and 
Beny Steinmetz.44 Added to those diamond industry firms whitewashed by 
the Kimberley Process are all the Zionist diamond dealers and cartels 
that have risen like a phoenix out of the ashes of the Holocaust. 
  
The 
Israeli-American enterprises of the Gertler/Steinmetz gang have 
proliferated and today are major shareholders or owners of diamond 
concessions in Congo’s Kasai province and copperbelt concessions in 
Katanga. The copperbelt is the big money in Congo. Copper prices 
recently hit an all time high due to monopoly control by corporations 
and new applications in transportation, aerospace and weaponry. Cobalt 
is used in dye and paint processes for manufacturing. More importantly, 
it is elemental to superalloys used for tank armor, spacecraft, 
turbines, ship hulls, ship hulls, blast furnaces, refineries, petroleum 
drilling rigs, nuclear reactors and nuclear weapons. Like coltan, or 
columbium-tantalite, cobalt is also used in cell phone batteries. The 
Katanga copperbelt is also rich in germanium, a rare metal used in 
optical fibers, infrared lenses and telecommunication satellites.45 
  
The entire 
military-industrial-prisons complex revolves around minerals like 
cobalt, niobium and heterogenite (cobalt oxide), yet the truth about 
what happens to African people in lands taken over by these mining 
companies is hidden by the corporate media. More and more land is being 
stolen, more and more atrocities committed, with less and less 
transparency, and less and less accountability, and fewer and fewer 
voices for the voiceless. And, as usual, there are always a lot of empty
 promises. 
  
THOUGH SHALT HAVE NO OTHER GODS 
  
Over the past 
fifty years, elite Israeli nationals have perpetrated conflict and 
injustice in Africa, fueled by and for minerals. Operatives associated 
with the Israeli military or intelligence services—the Mossad—maintain 
strategic criminal syndicates in competition and in partnership with 
other syndicates involving men like Philippe De Moerloose, Louis Michel,
 Viscount Etienne Davignon, John Bredenkamp and Tony Buckingham. 
  
Israeli trained
 shock troops became Mobutu’s bodyguards, with Mossad advisers. 
According to a report by the American Jewish Committee: after 1980 
“Mossad agents, military emissaries, and a small group of private 
businessmen… replaced diplomats as Israel’s main interlocutors with 
African leaders and political (mainly opposition) groups.” The report 
cites rising involvement of private defense and security interests, 
especially in Angola, DRC and Central Africa Republic, since 1992.46 
  
Israeli 
operatives and “businessmen” appear everywhere there is egregious 
suffering and dispossession. Dan Gertler’s forays into the bloody world 
of diamonds involve Israeli arms dealers Yair Klein, who is reportedly 
wanted by the U.S. for training Medellin drug-cartel militias in 
Colombia, and Dov Katz.47 Klein was convicted by Israel (1991) for his 
involvement with groups that targeted and assassinated Colombian 
politicians, journalists, and police. Jailed in Sierra Leone in 1999, 
Klein was a field representative for Gertler in war-torn Sierra Leone 
and Liberia. Gertler also mingles with the Russian Military Brotherhood,
 a group of “retired Russian generals whom Gertler describes as good 
friends.”48,49 
  
Retired Israeli
 Defense Forces Colonel Yair Klein reportedly organized arms for 
diamonds networks in Sierra Leone and Liberia after President Charles 
Taylor was deposed. In 1999, Klein was arrested in Sierra Leone on 
charges of smuggling arms to the rebel Revolutionary United Front.50 The
 U.N. also documented collaborations between Sierra Leone’ rebels and 
Lazare Kaplan agent Damian Gagnon; Lazare Kaplan International is one of
 the organized crime syndicates of Jewish American Maurice Templesman.51 
  
The Steinmetz 
Group of companies are also involved in the bloody diamond fields of 
Sierra Leone, along with Energem (formerly DiamondWorks), the company 
described above that is connected to the white mercenaries depicted in 
Hollywood’s Blood Diamond propaganda film.52 In December 2007, local 
people in Sierra Leone struggling to gain the smallest livelihood from 
their own resources were shot by police during peaceful protests against
 the Steinmetz-controlled Koidu Holdings site. It’s the same old local 
people’s story happening everywhere. These were people from communities 
driven off their own land by mining companies that promised the world, 
cajoled the trusting people, and gave nothing after. The Steinmetz gang 
called in the local paramilitary, a curfew was imposed and people were 
shot; the police, as usual, falsely claimed that protesters were 
armed.53 
  
Like most 
mining mafias in Africa, the Israeli octopus—organized crime syndicates,
 offshore subsidiaries, interlocking directorships and affiliated 
mercenaries—has gripped the very heart of Congo like an octopus grips 
and stuns its prey. Mining regulates the pulse of Congo, and foreign 
mining companies with their black sell-out agents are sucking the blood 
out of the people and the wealth out of the land. 
  
THOU SHALT NOT KILL 
  
Beyond the 
intriguing Jewish rivalry for diamonds in the heart of darkness, this 
tale takes a chilling turn with the involvement of certain German firms 
and New York City lawyers. NIKANOR, another Gertler/Steinmetz company of
 dubious origins operating in DRC, has a subcontract with the notorious 
ThyssenKrupp conglomerate, a company comprised of two former Nazi 
weapons manufacturers linked to the New York law firm of Sullivan and 
Cromwell, to Brown Brothers Harriman & Co., Lehman Brothers, Chase 
Manhattan Bank, J.P. Morgan, DuPont and IBM, in the great Nazi-American 
money plot.54 
  
These companies
 were all behind the Jewish Holocaust. The infamous German Krupp firm is
 the industrial corporation that collaborated with former CIA director 
Allen Dulles and former U.S. Secretary of State John Foster Dulles. 
Clients of the Dulles brothers’ law firm Sullivan and Cromwell included 
Adolph Hitler.54 Ted Terry, one of the senior counselors of the law firm
 Sullivan and Cromwell today, is also a director of a philanthropy 
called the Harold K. Hochschild (HKH) Foundation, named for the mining 
magnate behind AMAX, a company operating in the copperbelt in Zambia, 
but whose parent company, Phelps Dodge, operates in Katanga, Congo. 
Harold K. Hochschild was close to the CIA, and he appears to have backed
 the Katanga succession in the 1960’s just as Dan Gertler in recent 
years backed the reorganization of power in Congo by force. Sullivan and
 Cromwell was also the law firm for AMAX. 55,56 
  
Brown Brothers 
Harriman & Company (BBH) was the primary Wall Street connection for 
German companies and the U.S. financial interests of Fritz Thyssen, an 
early financial backer of the Nazi party. BBH bought and shipped 
millions of dollars of gold, steel, fuel, coal, and U.S. treasury bonds 
to Germany. These were used to build Hitler’s war machine, and the ties 
proliferated even after the Nazi concentration camps began churning out 
skeletons. The horrors of the concentration camps at Auschwitz, Birkenau
 and Buckenwald became public knowledge long before they became public 
outrage. It is the same story for Congo. 
  
A PRAYER FOR THE DEAD 
  
There are no 
records or statistics of the numbers of people brutalized or killed in 
the diamond or cobalt mining areas, like Kolwezi, Mbuji Mayi, Tshikapa, 
Banalia, or Kananga in DRC, or Ndola in Zambia, and many of the victims 
of security abuses will never be known. 
  
When Gertler 
and Steinmetz and their buddies came to Congo it was soon clear that 
they had to challenge Zimbabwean tycoons John Bredenkamp and Billy 
Rautenbach—two cronies of dictator Robert Mugabe involved in pillaging 
Congo and Zimbabwe for decades. The United Nations Panel of Experts on 
DRC named both men for plundering copper and cobalt from Katanga, and 
both deal globally in weapons. Bredenkamp is one of the fifty richest 
men in England and he reportedly owns a mansion several doors down from 
Margaret Thatcher’s residence in London. 
  
On November 7, 
2007 it was reported that Dan Gertler was instrumental in putting 
together a deal in which Katanga Mining Ltd. would buy rival NIKANOR for
 $2.1 billion and merge their adjacent mine projects in Congo to form 
the world’s largest cobalt company. Also announced was a joint venture 
between the Central African Mining & Exploration Company (CAMEC) and
 another Gertler-controlled firm called Prairie International Limited. 
  
The 
CAMEC/Prairie joint venture will exploit DRC’s Luita copper processing 
facility, develop the Mukondo Mountain cobalt mine—called the world’s 
richest cobalt mine—and work on “other” exploration properties. Prairie 
is majority owned by the family of Dan Gertler. CAMEC is connected to 
Zimbabwean/South African/British tycoon Billy Rautenbach.57 The DRC 
government effectively banned controversial Zimbabwean businessman Billy
 Rautenbach from the country by declaring him persona non grata in July 
2007, but this doesn’t seem to stop him from getting what he wants. 
Rautenbach is also wanted in South Africa on 300 charges of fraud, 
corruption and theft. 
  
Rautenbach is a
 former motor car rally driver who controls a business empire in 
Southern and Central Africa through a British Virgin Islands company 
called Ridgepoint Overseas Development Limited. In 1998, the short-lived
 President of Congo, Laurent Kabila, named Rautenbach the managing 
director of La Générale des Carrières et des Mines (Gécamines), one of 
Africa’s biggest cobalt mines, the Katanga properties of the Union 
Miniere de Haut Katanga formerly developed by the Belgian colonial 
government. Rautenbach today is one of the Africa’s largest exporters of
 heterogenite (cobalt ore) from the DRC through his Congo Cobalt Company
 (CoCoCo), but he also has shares in two other lucrative DRC mining 
firms—Boss and Mukondo—which reportedly earn over US$100 million a 
month.58 
  
While there has
 been a lot of Western media fanfare over the Kabila governments’ 
supposed “independent” review of mining contracts, little substantive 
change can be expected.59 Structural factors exploit the Congolese 
people and lands and benefit white businessmen, arms dealers, bankers, 
and their embraceable black agents. Big business benefits from 
perception management articles well-placed in media to give the 
impression that the international system is just, that there are 
watchdogs, checks and balances. 
  
However, while 
the DRC and the World Bank present a propaganda front about their 
ostensible attention to mining reform and the new mining code, 
NIKANOR—Mining Journal reports—“is in the advantageous position of 
having entered into a post mining-code contract, ‘which makes us 
[NIKANOR] relatively comfortable’”60 In other words, the mining review 
is a sham, it may force some changes, but it will be cosmetic at best. 
  
Dan Gertler and
 the Steinmetz Group’s partner Jewish-American Nir Livnat is also a 
director of Anglovaal Mining with Rick and Brian Menell and Basil Hersov
 of the South African Menell and Hersov dynasties.61 Hersov has been 
named as a beneficiary of fraud and racketeering involving British BAE 
Systems weapons deals with shady offshore companies.62 
  
The octopus of 
South African connections is a story in itself, with links to top 
officials from Britain to Canada, like Canadian Senator J. Trevor Eyton,
 and offshore mining companies involved in all the big money (diamonds, 
gold, petroleum, cobalt) and big corporations with interlocking 
directorships: Coca Cola, Nestlé, General Motors, and the Bush-connected
 Barrick Gold Corporation. Barrick, of course, is partnered up with the 
Oppenheimer/De Beers firm Anglo-American Corporation at six sites in 
Africa, including Congo. 
  
Rick Menell is a
 director of Bateman Engineering—owned by Benny Steinmetz—the junior 
partner of the NIKANOR projects in Katanga. Britain’s Earl of Balfour is
 a director of both Bateman and NIKANOR. Menell is also the director of 
Teal Exploration and Mining, whose directors include Joaquim Chissano, 
former President of Mozambique; Murray Hitzman, a Clinton administration
 official with the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy 
(1994-1996); Hannes Meyer, who worked with Anglo-Gold Ashanti in Congo, 
1999-2006, when militias in Ituri were funded to get the gold out. Teal 
Exploration also has ties to Anvil Mining and Anglo-American 
Corporation.63 
  
Brian Menell, 
Nir Livnat’s associate on the board of Anglovaal, is on the board of 
Energem (formerly DiamondWorks) with Tony and Mario Teixeira. The Livnat
 connection ties Teixeira into networks that have supported both Joseph 
Kabila and Jean-Pierre Bemba in Congo’s bloody wars. Energem is also 
involved in the trans-Uganda-Kenya pipeline, along with Nexant, a 
subsidiary of the deep intelligence and defense insider Bechtel 
Corporation.64 
  
Brian Menell is
 also on the board of First Africa Oil, which operates in seven African 
countries, and First Africa Oil director John Bentley is a director of 
Osprey Oil and Gas, whose directors include Carol Bell, a director of 
the Rockefeller’s Chase Manhattan Bank. Bentley is also on the board of 
Adastra Minerals—formerly America Mineral Fields (AMF, AMFI, AMX), a 
company based in 1995 in Hope, Arkansas—and set up by Robert Friedland 
and Max and Jean-Raymond Boulle, notable “friends of Bill” Clinton. 
Since 1995, American Mineral Fields has been involved in Brazil, Russia,
 Norway, Zambia, Angola and the DRC. A criminal backer of the war in 
DRC, Jean-Raymond Boulle, who holds 36.4 % of the company stock, was the
 former General Director of De Beers in Zaire, part of the Templesman 
alliance of terrorism under the Mobutu regime.65,66 
  
The 
Gertler/Steinmetz interests apparently curry huge favors with Congo’s 
number two most powerful man, Augustine Katumba Mwanke, one of Joseph 
Kabila’s closest allies and financiers, former Governor of Katanga 
(1998-2001) and director of Australia’s Anvil Mining. The UN Panel of 
Experts (2002) cited Mwanke for illegal arms deals and plunder of Congo:
 Mwanke negotiated arms purchases through Belgian banks and the DRC 
mining company MIBA.67 Reportedly, Mwanke personally clears $US 
1,000,000 a day through his interests in Katanga mining deals.68 
  
Anvil Mining 
has been involved in massacres in DRC.69 Anvil directors include former 
U.S. Ambassador Kenneth L. Brown, who served at U.S. embassies in 
Brussels, Kinshasa, Congo-Brazzaville and South Africa. Brown was Deputy
 Assistant Secretary of State for Africa (1987-1989) under George 
Schultz and George H.W. Bush and Director of Central African Affairs 
(1980-1981). The former top internal intelligence and security chief of 
the United Nations Observer’s Mission in the Democratic Republic of 
Congo (MONUC) has been worked for Anvil mining in Katanga since 2006.70 
  
THOU SHALT NOT RAPE AND PLUNDER 
  
Gertler/Steinmetz
 interests have also been jostling for copper and cobalt concessions 
with Kinross-Forrest Group. Gertler has bought up or invested heavily in
 companies just to close them down. George Forrest also made the UN hit 
list of Congo’s looters and Forrest and his three sons helped bankroll 
Joseph Kabila’s 2006 election “victory”.71 George Forrest’s daughter is 
reportedly married to the son of Louis Michel. Malta and George Forrest 
are controlling directors in Katanga Mining Limited. 
  
Born as 
Entreprise Générale Malta Forrest, the Belgian Forrest interests have 
been pillars of exploitation in Congo since at least 1922, when they 
launched mining operations in Katanga. Forrest’s Katanga Mining 
directors include: three Canadians; Congo’s Jean-Claude Masangu Mulongo,
 a former Governor of DRC and high official at the IMF and World Bank; 
and the current Governor of the Central Bank of DRC. The Forrest dynasty
 has munitions factories in Belgium and Kenya, and has partnered with 
OM-Group, in Ohio [USA], dealing in Congo’s cobalt and coltan. Forrest 
International also operates in Europe, Burundi—involving him on both 
sides of Congo’s bloody war—and the Middle East.72 Forrest interests in 
DRC include aviation, foods, plantations, construction, logging, copper 
and cobalt mining. Forrest companies are enmeshed in the coltan plunder 
in eastern Congo. 
  
Katanga is the 
world’s richest mining metropolis, part of the vast copper belt that 
stretches across northern Zambia and southern Congo—and the home to 
unprecedented human misery due to state orchestrated repression and 
communities overrun with toxic mining, tuberculosis, cancers, immune 
disorders, racial discrimination and slavery. The Zambian copperbelt 
concessions over the border involve many of the same companies and 
interests mentioned above, and others.73 
  
Workers and 
communities in and around these mines suffer all the standard treatable 
maladies (typhoid, malaria, tetanus, polio, malnutrition) as well. 
However, such stories are off the agenda for the North American, 
European, Japanese, Australian and Israeli media corporations providing 
the mainstay of English language indoctrination meant to instill racial 
superiority and a vast ignorance and obliviousness that leaves westerns 
populations shaking their heads and wringing their hands and clicking 
their tongues, while all the while wondering “what is to be done?” It 
does not cross people’s minds that their own hands are dirty, that their
 own consciousness has been falsified, as all the raw materials from 
Congo enrich the lives of people in the United States, Canada, Europe 
and Israel. 
  
The immediate 
capital investment required for just one Gertler project in Katanga—the 
Komoto Oliveira Virgule (KOV) project—is reportedly $US 1.8 billion 
dollars, income to kick start billions of dollars of unused equipment 
mothballed in the middle Mobutu era. There are rumors that Bechtel is 
involved, but the KOV project involves ThyssenKrupp AG as a minor 
player.74 
  
The Krupp firm 
is one of several German firms involved in the plunder in eastern Congo,
 exploitation which involves the DeutscheGesellschaft für technische 
Zusammenarbeit—GTZ—a “German technological cooperation agency” whose 
Supervisory Board has representatives of four Federal [German] 
Ministries.75 Krupp industries use coltan and cobalt for superalloys.76 
Dr.-Ing. Ekkehard D. Schultz, a ThyssenKrupp director, is also a 
director of Bayer AG, the Germany firm whose subsidiary H.C. Starck was 
named for its involvement in the ongoing illegal plunder of coltan and 
cassiterite (tin) in eastern Congo. NIKANOR director Jay Pomrenze is 
also a consultant for the Deutsche Bank.77 Certain German and U.S. firms
 benefit from the military occupation of Rwandan-backed warlord Laurent 
Nkunda in North Kivu, DRC, where Nkunda controls the Lueshe niobium mine
 “owned” by Gesellschaft fuer Elektrometallurgie GmbH, a subsidiary of 
New York-based Mettalurg Group.78,79 
  
HONOR THY FATHER AND THY MOTHER 
  
Dan Gertler’s 
grandfather, Moshe Schnitzer (d. November 2007), was known in Israel as 
“Mr. Diamond;” in youth he joined the pre-state underground organization
 Etzel (Irgoun), an Israeli military cell self-defined as an 
“untra-nationationalist Jewish militia,” but one that committed acts of 
terrorism in service to the Israeli cause.8 Moshe Schnitzer assumed a 
major role in the Africa-Israeli diamond trade in the 1950’s in a 
partnership business called Schnitzer-Greenstein. Schnitzer later 
founded the Israel Diamond Exchange in Tel Aviv in 1960, which today 
brings Israel $14 billion annually in blood business, and is the 
country’s second-largest industry, but Israel’s top export. King Leopold
 III of Belgium decorated Schnitzer in recognition of his activities 
favoring the close relationship of Belgium, Israel and the DeBeers 
diamond cartels, and Schnitzer was also President of the Harry 
Oppenheimer Diamond Museum in Israel.80 
  
The diamond 
jewelry trade in the United States is more than $30 billion annually, 
and 99%—everything that is not synthetic or artificial diamonds—involves
 blood diamonds and the above organized crime syndicates. Israel buys 
more than 50% of the world’s rough diamonds, and the U.S. buys 
two-thirds of these. The diamond factories are located in Nethanya, 
Petach Tikvah, Tel Aviv, Ramat Gan, Jerusalem, and other cities around 
the country, but most of the offices were in Tel Aviv in the financial 
district on Ahad Ha’am Street.81 Dan Gertler’s father, Asher Gertler, 
and his uncle, Shmuel Schnitzer, manage the original family business, 
and Shmuel is Vice-Chairman of the Belgian-based World Diamond 
Council—the entity that spends more money promoting the false image of 
“conflict-free” diamonds than it does helping any of the people 
dispossessed or brutalized by the diamond industry.48 
  
On August 16, 
2007, Rabbi Bentolila in Kinshasa received a communication asking: “What
 does the Torah say about men exploiting other men for vast profits 
while other men are starving and dying all around them? Is there some 
hierarchy to the Torah that suggests, for example, that black people or 
Africans are lesser beings, and therefore not to be a concern where 
profound profits are being made?” 
  
There was no 
reply from Rabbi Bentolila, he was apparently busy readying for another 
Bar Mitsvah in Belgium. Unfortunately for Dan Gertler and his spiritual 
advisers, the Torah says that a Jew can keep a slave, but a Jew kept as a
 slave must be redeemed, and that—an empty, foolish justification for 
exploiting innocent people—is how religion falsifies spirituality. 
  
  
Keith Harmon 
Snow is an independent human rights investigator and war correspondent 
who worked with Survivors Rights International (2005-2006), Genocide 
Watch (2005-2006) and the United Nations (2006) to document and expose 
genocide and crimes against humanity in Sudan and Ethiopia. He has 
worked in 17 countries in Africa, and he recently worked in Afghanistan. 
  
 
 Posted by CRIMES AND CORRUPTION OF THE NEW WORLD ORDER NEWS mparent7777 Marc Parent CCNWON   at 1:40 PM  
 
 
Global Witness
Congo-Kinshasa: FTSE 100 Mining Company ENRC Must Openly Address Congo Corruption Concerns
11 JUNE 2012 
 
Eurasian
 Natural Resources Corporation (ENRC), one of the largest mining groups 
listed on London's stock exchange, must publicly address concerns over 
corruption risks associated with its rapid acquisition of mining assets 
in the Democratic Republic of Congo, said Global Witness in a memo to 
ENRC's shareholders published today. 
 
Between
 September 2009 and July 2011, ENRC acquired over $2 billion of copper 
and cobalt mines in Congo. All of these deals have been acquired in 
apparent collusion with the controversial businessman Dan Gertler, who 
is a friend of Congolese President Joseph Kabila. 
 
The
 deals have seen ENRC make large payments to offshore and secretive 
shell companies associated with Mr Gertler. These offshore companies 
secretly snapped up prize mining assets at vastly undervalued prices and
 quickly sold them on to ENRC - in one case quickly flipping a mine to 
ENRC for five times the original value paid. Global Witness is concerned
 that corrupt Congolese officials could be among the beneficiaries of 
these deals. 
 
"The
 nature of these deals raises serious questions about whether corrupt 
Congolese officials could be benefitting from Congo's considerable 
mineral wealth at the expense of the Congolese people," said Daniel 
Balint-Kurti, Campaign Leader for the Democratic Republic of Congo at 
Global Witness. "The Congolese state has foregone billions of dollars in
 revenues by secretly selling off its assets on the cheap to offshore 
companies. With so much at stake in one of the poorest countries on the 
planet, ENRC must do the right thing and shed full light on its 
dealings." 
 
In
 mid-May, Global Witness submitted a detailed list of questions relating
 to ENRC's dealings with Mr Gertler to both ENRC and the law firm 
Dechert, which acts as the company's anti-corruption auditor. ENRC must 
provide full answers to these questions and publish them if it wishes to
 end controversy over its activities in Congo. ENRC's chairman, Mehmet 
Dalman, has said he expects to have examined the results of an external 
audit into corruption allegations by the end of June. In a statement 
sent to Global Witness as we were going to press, ENRC said: "ENRC has a
 zero-tolerance policy to bribery and corruption, which extends to all 
of our business dealings, across all of our operations. The Board has 
been working extremely hard to ensure that its policies are adopted and 
procedures adhered to, with serious consequences for any breach of these
 policies and procedures." 
 
Global
 Witness has also submitted questions to Mr Gertler relating to his 
business with ENRC. While Mr Gertler has not provided answers to this 
list of questions, shortly before publication his spokesman issued a 
statement questioning Global Witness's motives and saying we are funded 
by Mr Gertler's competitors. The statement also said Global Witness has 
rejected an offer of an independent audit of the beneficiaries of 
companies that belong to the Fleurette Group, Mr Gertler's holding 
company. These statements are incorrect. Global Witness would be happy 
to discuss the offer of an audit and has told the Fleurette Group so on a
 number of occasions. 
 
Global
 Witness's latest briefing on corruption concerns linked to Mr Gertler 
comes a month after it called on another FTSE 100 company, Glencore, to 
explain its involvement with the businessman. Both Glencore and ENRC own
 mining interests in Congo worth billions of dollars, and for both these
 companies their assets are tightly wound up with Mr Gertler's 
interests. 
 
"ENRC
 shareholders should be taking a close look at the corruption risks 
being run by their company in Congo," said Balint-Kurti. "ENRC should 
cease conducting business with offshore entities whose beneficiaries are
 not publicly declared and which pose significant corruption risks. As 
shareholders gather for the ENRC AGM, they should be demanding that the 
company takes convincing action against corruption and stops conducting 
business in such a secretive manner." 
 
ENRC
 has defended its record on corruption in Congo.. Mr Gertler and 
Glencore have similarly denied any involvement in corruption in Congo, 
while also challenging the facts presented by Global Witness. These 
views are reflected in greater detail in Global Witness's briefings. 
 
Further
 information about Global Witness's investigation into the "secret 
sales" scandal can be found at www.globalwitness.org/secretsales. 
 
The
 documents available from the Global Witness website include: Global 
Witness's memo to ENRC's shareholders, Q&A on ENRC's links to the 
"secret sales" scandal, the list of questions sent by Global Witness to 
ENRC on 15th May, the list of questions sent by Global Witness to Mr 
Gertler's spokesman on 14th May, the statement by Dan Gertler's 
spokesman regarding Global Witness on 11th June, the response by ENRC to
 Global Witness on 11th June. 
 
The
 9th May memo to Glencore's shareholders as well as supporting documents
 is also available at www.globalwitness.org/secretsales. 
 
For ENRC's stance on corruption, see its Code of Conduct at http://www.enrc.com/en-GB/Media1/Code-of-Conduct/. 
 
For
 recent valuations of some of ENRC's most valuable assets in Congo see 
briefing by Renaissance Capital at 
http://www.centralasia.rencap.com/download.asp?id=13951.
 
  
- Aeolanthus biformifolius De Wild.; a hyperaccumulator of copper from Zaire
 
- Associations
 de mineraux secondaires d'uranium a Shinkolobwe (region du Shaba, 
Zaire). Secondary uranium mineral assemblages at Shinkolobwe, Shaba, 
Zaire
 
- Bauxite deposits in the SADC Region
 
- Copper deposits in marine sediments
 
- Copper
 marketing; the London metal exchange and CIPEC; New directions in 
mineral development policies; report of an international workshop held 
at Bagauda, near Kano, Nigeria; 8-10 September 1975
 
- Das
 Cu-W-S-System und seine Mineralien sowie ein neues Tungstenitvorkommen 
in Kipushi/Katanga. The Cu-W-S system and its minerals as well as a new 
tungstenite occurrence in Kipushi, Katanga
 
- Diamonds in the SADC Region
 
- Die
 zeit- und schichtgebundenen Lagerstaettembildungen des Urans in der 
Erdgeschichte. The time and stratigraphic effect in uranium ore 
formation in the Earth's history; Beitrage zu Problemen der Zeit- und 
Schichtgebundenen Lagerstaettenbildung
 
- Examen
 des oxydes de fer et titane dans l'environnement du gisement de cuivre 
de Musoshi (Shaba, republique du Zaire). The iron and titanium oxides in
 the environment of the copper deposits of Musoshi, Shaba, Zaire
 
- Fluid Inclusions and Stratiform Mineralization at Kamoto, Western Katanga
 
- Geologic
 factors in looking for hidden gold deposits; Mineral'nyye paragenezisy i
 tektonika rudnykh mestorozhdeniy--Mineral parageneses and tectonics of 
ore deposits
 
- Geological background to the copper-bearing strata of southern Shaba (Zaire)
 
- Geological background to the copper-bearing strata of southern Shaba (Zaire)
 
- Geologie et geochimie du gisement de Kipushi, Zaire. The geology and geochemistry of the Kipuchi deposit, Zaire
 
- Geology and copper deposits of the Musoshi and Kinsenda mines in Replubic of Zaire
 
- Heavy mineral sand deposits in the SADC Region
 
- Kamoto (Katanga) et White Pine (Michigan) ; deux gisements stratiformes de cuivre
 
- Kamoto
 (Katanga) et White Pine (Michigan); deux gisements stratiformes de 
cuivre. Kamoto (Katanga) and White Pine (Michigan); two stratiform 
copper deposits
 
- La
 dolomie stromatolithique "R.S.C." dans les gisements cupriferes 
stratiformes du Shaba; Zaire. The stromatolitic dolomite in the 
stratiform copper layers of Shaba, Zaire
 
- La
 succession stratigraphique du C.M.N. (ou R.2.3.) au centre de la 
sous-province cuprifere shabienne. The stratigraphic succession of the 
C.M.N. (or R.2.3) at the center of the Shabian copper-bearing 
subprovince
 
- Le gisement primaire aurifere de Twangitza. The primary gold ore deposit of Twangitza, Kivu, Zaire
 
- Les
 concentrations minerales de la chaine ouest-congolienne et de son 
avant-pays. The mineral concentrations of the Western Congo Chain and 
its foreland; Resumo das Comunicacoes, Simposios e Conferencias; 
Conferencias
 
- Les formations ferrugineuses de la Tele (Haut-Zaire). The ferruginous formations of Tele, upper Zaire
 
- Les gisements d'itabirites de la region Luebo-Charlesville (Kasai). Itabirite formations in the Luebo-Charlesville area, Kasai
 
- Les mines de fer mondiales et la préparation des minerais - Afrique
 
- Les
 sulfures du gisement cuprifere stratiforme de Musoshi, Shaba, Zaire. 
The sulfides of the stratiform cupriferous deposit of Musoshi, Shaba, 
Zaire
 
- Lithium;
 the element that makes the world go round; Proceedings of the 2nd 
'industrial minerals' international congress; held at the Sheraton 
Hotel, Munich, on 17-19 May, 1976
 
- Lixiviation ammoniacale d'un minerai cupro-cobaltifere sulfure. Ammonia leaching of cupro-cobaltiferous sulfide minerals
 
- Metallogenic aspects of the Shaban Copperbelt, Zaire
 
- Metallotectes du gisement de Kamoto (Republique du Zaire). "Metallotects" (metallogeny criteria) of the Kamoto deposit, Zaire
 
- Minerais
 cupriferes et roches encaissantes a Musoshi, province du Shaba, 
Republique du Zaire. Copper minerals and host rocks at Musoshi, Shaba, 
Zaire
 
- Mineralisations
 cupro-cobaltiferes associees aux horizons pyroclastiques situes dans le
 faisceau superieur de la serie de Roan, a Shituru, Shaba, Zaire. The 
cupro-cobaltiferous mineralizations associated with pyroclastic horizons
 in the upper part of Roan series, Shituru, Shaba, Zaire
 
- Mineralogie du gisement de Kipushi, Shaba, Zaire. The mineralogy of the Kipushi deposit, Shaba, Zaire
 
- New data about the Kilo-Moto gold deposits (Zaire); I, The district of Mongbwalu
 
- On the diagenetic formation of ores in sedimentary beds, with special reference to Kamoto, Shaba, Zaire
 
- Paragenese
 des sulfures de cuivre dans les gisements du Shaba (Zaire); I, Kipushi;
 II, Kamoto. The paragenesis of the copper sulfides in the Shaba 
deposits (Zaire); I, Kipushi; II, Kamoto
 
- Particularites
 stratigraphiques et petrographiques du faisceau inferieur du Groupe des
 Mines au centre de l'arc cuprifere shabien. Stratigraphic and 
petrographic characteristics of the lower part of the Groupe des Mines 
at the center of the Shabian copper-bearing arc
 
- Rayony
 preimushchestvennogo razvitiya mestorozhdeniy olovonosnykh 
redkometal'nykh pegmatitov. Tin-bearing areas associated with rare-metal
 bearing pegmatites
 
- Relations
 et signification de minerais hematitiques et de couches itabiritiques 
dans une serie precambrienne metamorphique. Relationships and 
significance of hemetite and itabirite beds in a Precambrian metamorphic
 sequence
 
- Some aspects of the stratiform ore deposits of the Zambian Copperbelt and their genetic significance
 
- Sources of rare earth element in uranium deposits in Shinkolobwe and Kamoto, DRC
 
- Stratigraphie
 et mineralisations du gisement cuprifere de Kipapila, Shaba, Zaire. 
Stratigraphy and mineralization of the copper deposits of Kipapila, 
Shaba, Zaire
 
- Stratigraphie,
 tectonique et mineralisations dans l'arc cuprifere du Shaba (republique
 du Zaire). Stratigraphy, tectonics and mineralization in the 
cupriferous arc of Shaba, Zaire
 
- Sur
 la similitude entre les gisements uraniferes (type Shinkolobwe) et les 
gisements cupriferes (type Kamoto) au Shaba, Zaire. The similarity 
between the uranium deposits (Shinkolobwe type) and the copper deposits,
 (Kamoto type) at Shaba, Zaire
 
- Tantalum and columbium in Zaire
 
- The 1:2,000,000 scale mineral occurrences map (1976) of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) revised
 
- The geological environment of copper deposits in Tanganyika
 
- The gitology of some Adelaidean stratiform copper occurrences
 
- The
 manganese ore deposit of Kisenge-Kamata-Kapolo (western Katanga, Shaba,
 Zaire); geochemical composition of the primary carbonate ore; 
Flyuorit-baritovyye, margantsevyye i skarnovyye 
mestorozhdeniya--Fluorite-barite, manganese and skarn deposits
 
- The
 Pan African West Congo and Katanga thrust and fold belts and their 
foreland domains: similarities and differences in Neoproterozoic basin 
evolution and mineralization
 
- U-Th-Pb systematics of Zaire cubic diamonds.
 
- Uniform
 GIS-compilation (1:100,000) of a geological map of the western half of 
the Gecamines concession in the Copperbelt of Katanga, Democratic 
Republic of Congo (DRC)
 
- Volcanisme
 et mineralisations diagenetiques dans le gisement de l'Etoile, Shaba, 
Zaire. Volcanism and diagenetic mineralization in the Etoile deposits, 
Shaba, Zaire
 
- Vue d'ensemble sur les gisements auriferes du Haut-Zaire. Overview of upper Zaire gold deposits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Rebuilding of primary school. 
  
  
  
  
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