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Caring for Congo, or an Empty Effort?

by Michael Busch


As part of the sweep­ing finan­cial reform bill signed into law this past week by Pres­i­dent Barack Obama, a sur­pris­ing leg­isla­tive rider took effect seek­ing an end to the inter­nal con­flict plagu­ing Demo­c­ra­tic Repub­lic of Congo (DRC). The pro­vi­sion, which resulted largely from inten­sive lob­by­ing efforts by the Enough Project to stop geno­cide, is designed to pre­vent desta­bi­liz­ing ele­ments within the DRC from feed­ing off the country’s lucra­tive trade in pre­cious met­als. The DRC boasts rich deposits of tung­sten, tan­ta­lum, and tin—met­als com­monly found in cell phones, lap­tops, video game con­soles and other elec­tronic devices — prof­its from which have long been seen to fuel the activ­i­ties of non-state com­bat­ants there. 

Sup­port­ers of the pro­vi­sion applaud its poten­tial to help curb the hideous vio­lence that has rav­aged DRC for bet­ter part of the last fif­teen years. Writ­ing in the Huff­in­g­ton Post on Fri­day, Rep­re­sen­ta­tive Howard Berman (D-CA) — Chairman of the House Com­mit­tee on For­eign Affairs—cham­pi­oned the law’s com­mit­ment to lim­it­ing the profit oppor­tu­ni­ties that con­flict min­er­als offer to armed groups within the coun­try. The new law requires “that com­pa­nies doing busi­ness in the Congo and adjoin­ing coun­tries dis­close both the prove­nance of the min­er­als they use and the efforts they have taken to ensure that their dol­lars do not directly or indi­rectly sup­port armed groups that employ rape as a tool of war and oth­er­wise per­pet­u­ate the conflict…An impor­tant step,” Berman argues, “in chang­ing the sit­u­a­tion in that belea­guered country.” 

But the unfor­tu­nate real­ity is that no mat­ter how well-intentioned, the law will have lit­tle pos­i­tive impact on the ground in Congo.

For starters, it pre­sup­poses a Con­golese state capa­ble of enforc­ing the law’s pro­vi­sions. Under the reg­u­la­tions imposed by the leg­is­la­tion, elec­tron­ics man­u­fac­tur­ers must cer­tify the ori­gin of all min­er­als used in their prod­ucts with the Secu­ri­ties and Exchange Com­mis­sion, and com­ply with an order to pro­duce yearly reports detail­ing their efforts to avoid pur­chase of so-called “con­flict min­er­als.” Yet it is pre­cisely an absence of the state in mineral-rich regions that allows the ille­gal trade in pre­cious met­als to flourish. 

The vast major­ity of min­eral wealth in DRC falls under the con­trol of regional mil­itias, directly and indi­rectly, ren­der­ing the state’s abil­ity to reg­u­late the flow of min­er­als into and out of the coun­try prac­ti­cally nonex­is­tent. Accord­ing to reports detail­ing the min­eral trade in DRC, rebels mine the met­als and sell them to traders who then smug­gle them across the bor­der into neigh­bor­ing coun­tries. From there, the goods make their way along a com­plex string of exchange largely out­side state purview cul­mi­nat­ing in their sale to transna­tional cor­po­ra­tions. By the time the min­er­als have been con­verted into elec­tronic gad­gets, any attempts to trace their ori­gin become Sisyphean. 

Even if DRC pos­sessed the state capac­ity to prop­erly mon­i­tor the min­er­als and pre­vent war­ring fac­tions from prof­it­ing off them, how­ever, it’s far from clear that this would sig­nif­i­cantly reduce vio­lence through­out the affected provinces. Min­eral exploita­tion is a means of fuel­ing con­flict, not an end in itself. Until the broader issues wrack­ing DRCthe con­tin­ued pres­ence of Hutu inter­a­hawame in Kivu, the inces­sant med­dling of Rwanda in Con­golese affairs, and land rights dis­putes, to name but three — are resolved, unabated vio­lence in affected areas should be expected. Unfor­tu­nately, the United States has thus far demon­strated lit­tle inter­est in directly address­ing these under­ly­ing causes of con­flict in DRC

And then there’s the larger prob­lem of unin­tended con­se­quences. Oppo­nents of the mea­sure argue that the has­sles and uncer­tainty of ver­i­fi­ca­tion will scare off poten­tial investors, effec­tively sad­dling the coun­try with a de facto trade embargo. If busi­nesses do pull out of DRC, warns John Kany­oni—the head of the Asso­ci­a­tion of Min­eral Exporters in Congo — “thou­sands of Con­golese will be job­less and might most prob­a­bly (be) join­ing the armed groups.” Thus, the law could have the per­verse effect of gen­er­at­ing the very prob­lems it seeks prevent.

These con­sid­er­a­tions aside, the new law con­sti­tutes a good faith effort to bring vio­lence in the DRC to an end and force transna­tional cor­po­ra­tions to reori­ent busi­ness prac­tices that priv­i­lege the bot­tom line over human rights. It could be that, in the best case sce­nario, the law eco­nom­i­cally crip­ples war­ring mili­tias in DRC, allow­ing local Con­golese to enjoy a mea­sure of safety that they cur­rently are without. 

But DRC needs much more than good inten­tions if it’s to emerge suc­cess­fully from the ruins of state col­lapse. Above all, the coun­try demands secu­rity. As we have dis­cov­ered, unfor­tu­nately, assist­ing coun­tries in this regard proves exceed­ingly dif­fi­cult and polit­i­cally fraught. Yet it’s of the essence. Until DRC is capa­ble of per­form­ing the basic func­tion of the Weber­ian state — monop­o­liza­tion of the use of force for the pro­tec­tion of civil­ians — the coun­try will con­tinue suf­fer­ing under the heavy weight of social dis­or­der. And any attempts by Wash­ing­ton in the mean­time to bring the con­flict in DRC to a close will do more to alle­vi­ate trou­bled con­sciences on Capi­tol Hill than actu­ally bring about the mean­ing­ful change they pur­port­edly affect.

Posted by Michael Busch on Jul 24th, 2010 and filed under International Peace and Absurdity by Michael Busch, News. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0. You can leave a response by filling following comment form or trackback to this entry from your site

2 Responses for “Caring for Congo, or an Empty Effort?”

  1. […] of the money the min­eral busi­ness gen­er­ates. …Did death build your gadget?Albany Times Union­Car­ing for Congo, or an Empty Effort?GC Advo­cateHP Com­mends Enact­ment of Con­flict Min­er­als LegislationTTKN […]

  2. Kmcampell says:

    I’m soooo tired of the US and the rest of the world think­ing they can re-ice a cake that was made with rot­ten eggs to solve the prob­lem. The rot­ten eggs being the many evil hands that stand on African soil to get rich and say to hell with the peo­ple, (exxon, cough, and any dia­mond pol­ish­ers in the busi­ness of bling)
    Good arti­cle, would love to know what every­day peo­ple can do to help or be part of a change, that’s what’s miss­ing from pol­i­tics — the action, the where do you begin, tell us why this won’t work but also give insight on what could work. You know what they need, how do they get it, then again that’s a book, not an article.…

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