
No 4 / December 2006
War Profiteers’ News
The email newsletter of WRI's Global Initiative against War Profiteers || español | Index of past issues
Editorial
Our December edition is focusing on war profiteering in the Democratic Republic of Congo(DRC). We feel that it is important to highlight the responsibilities that corporations have in the ongoing crisis in DRC.
Many thanks go to Jan Van Criekinge who provides most of the contents of this edition. As it's said in the main article of this edition, countering the exploitation of Congo's resources by a small but powerful elite is a big step to improve the conditions of the Congolese. The peace movement has to play a role in denouncing and challenging what these corporations are doing, both in DRC and in our home towns.
The focus on the DRC comes at a special time as War Resisters' International is preparing its participation at the World Social Forum (WSF) in Nairobi, Kenya between the 20-25 of January 2007. The goal of our presence at the WSF is to make antimilitarism and nonviolence more visible at this gathering of social movements, but also to strengthen our connections with groups and organizations in Africa. One of the many events that WRI will be holding at the WSF is a workshop on war profiteering. We plan to work on strategies to counter the war profiteering in this region.
It is also important to mention that WRI has an Africa Working Group that is dedicated to peace and nonviolence in Africa. If you wish to join this Working Group, please contact the WRI office.
Last but not least, I want wish you all the very best for the coming year.
Javier Gárate
Upcoming events

World Social Forum
Nairobi, Kenya 20 - 25 of January 2007
War Resisters' International events at the WSF:
Seminars:
- Against all militarism
- African perspective on nonviolence
- Eritrea: Human Rights and Militarism
Workshops:
- War Profiteers
- Conscientious objection
- Nonviolence training
- Globalising Nonviolence
- Venezuela: From a Human Rights perspective
Please contact the WRI office if you will be attending the WSF!
Email newsletter of War Resisters' InternationaI's Global Initiative on War Profiteers
War Resisters' International, 5 Caledonian Road, London N1 9DX, Britain; tel +44-20-7278 4040; fax +44-20-7278 0444; email warprofiteersnews-editor@wri-irg.org
Subscribe/Unsubscribe
To subscribe, you can go to the website of this list, or send an email.
To unsubscribe, send an email to warprofiteersnews-
unsubscribe@lists.wri-irg.org.
Donate to WRI!
War Resisters' International depends on your donations to be able to carry out its work. Donate to WRI online now at wri-irg.org/en/donate-en.htm.
War Profiteer of the Month
The Forrest Group
There are many corporations profiteering in DRC; the mining industry is one of the most involved in the destabilization of the country.Following there is a list of some of these corporations, and from all of them we will highlight one: The Forrest Group
The Forrest Group has the longest history of exploiting the Congo, gaining its first mining concessions before the Congo declared independence from the Belgians. The group, which includes the Ohio-based OM Group, has numerous concessions in Katanga (Shaba). Chairperson George Forrest is the former chair of the Congo’s state-owned mining firm Gecamines, and owner of the New Lachaussee, which is a Belgian leading manufacturer of cartridge casings, grenades, light weapons and cannon launchers. His empire also includes munitions/arms factories in Kenya and Tanzania.
Until 1990 the government enterprise Gecamines, which owns all the mining rights in Katanga, was the government's money-spinner, providing at least one third of the government's income. The secret of this high profitability was that the ore was refined on a large scale in Congo itself, up to purity of 98%. This has changed dramatically for example nowadays Gecamines only produces 20.000 ton of copper while in 1985 it was 470.000 ton.
Over the last 10 years art of Gecamines have gradually been privatized through joint ventures in which Gecamines contributed its mining rights and the private partners put up the money.
In February, 2004, a contract was signed between Gecamines and British Virgin Islands - baed Kinross Forrest Limited, creating the Kamoto Join Venture and assigning 75% ownership to Kinross Forrest (based on a $200 million investment) and 25% to Gecamines. Georges Forrest International Afrique S.PRL owns 40% of Kinross Forrest, Kinross Forrest is now being taken over by Katanga Mining Limited, and what a surprise!, one of the board directors is George A. Forrest.
Forrest owns the main mining contracts in the province of Katanga, which is overflowing with raw materials and has always made the largest contribution to the national treasury.
Tricia Feeney from the UK-based NGO Raid said : "Forrest ensures that he is the only serious contractor in Katanga. Through his social network which he has built up during the last thirty years he has no need for clear rules, on the contrary. His competitive advantage is that he can function in an environment without clear directives."
During the colonial times it was mainly the Belgians who profited from the soil of now DRC, during the Mobutu era it was le president-fondateur who stoled the money from the treasury. Will the rich subsoil finally provide a sound basis for rebuilding the country? The answer depends mainly on what will happen in the province of Katanga ,a province controlled by George Forrest.
List of other mining corporation profiteering in the DRC
- Anglo Gold Anshanti
- Metalor Technologies
- Banro Corporation
- Goldfields
- Anvil Mining
- First Quantum Minerals
- Adastra
- Metorex
- Moto Mines
Other corporations in the DRC
Bechtel in DRC
Bechtel was interested in winning business in the mineral-rich Congo and established an early and friendly relationship with the rebel leader Larent Kabila in 1997, before he took control of the whole country. Bechtel went one step further than many of its Western competitors involved in the Congo by supplying high-tech intelligence and offering to draw up a master development plan and inventory of the country's mineral resources free of charge. According to the Wall Street Journal, the company compiled, "the most complete mineralogical and geographical data of the DRC ever assembled, information worth a fortune to any prospective mining or oil firm." The company also commissioned and paid for NASA satellite studies of the country to develop detailed maps of the DRC's mineral potential." Robert Stewart, an executive representing Bechtel International Inc. became a trusted advisor to the Congolese leader, traveling the country with Kabila.
Coincidentally, one year after Bechtel initially expressed interest in mapping the mineral date in the DRC, coltan was discovered in the eastern region. This mineral is used in cell phones, computers and high tech devices. Since the discovery of the mineral, rebel groups in the Congo have made hundreds of millions of dollars on the illicit sale of coltan to the US, Europe and Asia.
Bechtel, a US aerospace & construction company, provided satellite maps of reconnaissance photos of Mobutu’s troops for the ADFL invasion of Congo in 1996. The Rwanda Patriotic Front (RPF), led by Paul Kagame, the current Rwandan President graduate of the U.S. Army officers school at Fort Leavenworth, used Bechtel’s NASA maps to locate Rwandan Hutu civilians that fled the cataclysm in Rwanda in 1994. An estimated 800,000 refugees were hunted down and killed in the Congo’s forests. Bechtel’s friends in high places include former Secretary of State George Shultz (Board of Directors), former Secretary of Defense Casper Weinberger (Bechtel Counsel) and retired USMC general Jack Sheehan (Senior Vice President), who is also a member of the Defense Policy Board at the Pentagon. Riley P. Bechtel is on the Board of J.P. Morgan. Bechtel’s Nexant Company is the prime contractor on the Uganda-Kenya pipeline project, believed to ultimately facilitate petroleum transport out of the Semliki Basin of Lake Albert.
Campaign of the Month
No Blood in my Cell Phone
Warring groups compete for rich resources. This includes gold, diamonds, copper, uranium, and perhaps most significantly, coltan. The DRC has 65 percent of the world’s coltan deposits. This mineral is valuable for production of electronic devices from cell phones to video game consoles.
The way coltan reaches the market is very unsettling. The military, local militias and rebels are all involved in smuggling. Illicit profits fund these violent groups. Ironically, as a UN Panel of Experts pointed out, the conflict sometimes unites the warring parties by making them business partners. They use the same weapons dealers and middlemen.
These middlemen buy directly from the smugglers and sell to major corporations. Thus, few profits benefit the DRC. In fact, the Congolese suffer greatly from the illegal digging. Unregulated mining damages the environment. Mine operators push people from resource rich areas. There are also reports of slave labor.
In reaction, there is a "No blood on my cell phone!" campaign. Cell phone companies allegedly facilitate the exploitation, so people are urged not to buy cell phones made with coltan. The campaign has not stopped the mining yet, but it has increased global awareness of the issue. Now, the DRC government and foreign governments need to intervene.
The Belgian air company Sabena is one of the means of transporting the mineral from Kigali (capital city of Rwanda) to Brussels, and associated to American Airlines, announced the suspension of the service, under strong pressure from the world campaign “No blood on my cell phone!” (or: “Pas de sang sur mon GSM”), exhorting people not to buy cell phones containing Coltan due to its repercussion on the prolongation of the civil war in the Congo. As a result of this campaign, the Belgian research institute International Peace Information Service (IPIS) produced a document in January 2002 “Supporting the War Economy in the DRC: European Companies and the Coltan Trade,” which documents the leading role played by the companies in promoting the war through their cooperation with the military and exhorting that the international consideration of the Coltan trade be given priority over its local aspects.
The campaign is still working in lobbying and researching, but not so much with a public awareness campaign.
The NGOs involved in this campaign are:
CONGO (DRC) and War Profiteers: a tragedy forgotten by the global peace movement?
By Jan Van Criekinge
After decades of colonialism, dictatorship and wars, on Wednesday, 6 December 2006, the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) swore in its first fair and freely elected president since independence from Belgium in 1960. "This moment marks the beginning of a new era that must bring well-being and development to Congo's people", said president Joseph Kabila (35) at his inauguration ceremony outside the presidential palace in the capital city Kinshasa. Kabila won the run-off presidential elections on 29 October 2006 with 58 percent of the votes, compared with about 42 percent for former rebel leader Jean-Pierre Bemba. Although the new president has been accused of continuing a trend of corruption and ignoring human rights violations and other abuses by his new ‘republican’ FARDC-army, Kabila, is widely praised in Congo and abroad for bringing in a peace plan that finally ended the 1996-2002 period of wars.
The six-year civil and international war in Congo that has killed more than four million people and displaced another two million may have ‘officially’ ended, but the dying has certainly not. Every day in Congo, a deadly combination of conflict-related atrocities (in which rape is widely used as a weapon by all parties involved), starvation, poverty and disease kills over 1,200 people. This conflict is for sure one of the most under-reported human tragedies of our lifetime, yet it is one of the most lethal since World War II.
Decades of unrelenting violence, poverty, and disease have created what the United Nations has called the greatest humanitarian challenge now facing the world. Also it seems that the global peace movement has greatly neglected this bloody, but also very complex war, in which so many groups, countries and war profiteers are involved.
Congo has a long history of plunder and war profiteering. Extremely rich in cobalt, diamonds, copper, gold and other rare minerals, Congo attracted the interest of the European imperialist powers only at the end of the 19th century. At the Conference of Berlin (1884-1885) the then Belgian king Leopold II succeeded in getting recognition for his claims over this enormous territory, right in the heart of the continent. In his personal name, the king created the so-called ‘Congo Free State’, in which a brutal exploitation of wild rubber, ivory and timber wood started soon. It is said that nearly the half of the population of the Congo Bassin disappeared between 1880 and 1920 as a direct or indirect result of this ruthless colonial plunder.
Congo gained independence from Belgium on 30 June 1960 under president Kasavubu and the charismatic and popular prime minister Patrice Lumumba. There followed a period of great instability and foreign military intervention, including by the United Nations. The mineral-rich provinces of Katanga and South Kasai, with the active support of colonial companies and mercenaries, soon even declared their independence. In 1965 it was finally army colonel Joseph Mobutu’s second coup d’etat that marked the beginning of a 32 years rule by a western-backed dictator - he changed his own name to Mobutu Sese Seko and that of his country in Zaire. Mobutu and the elite around him plundered the nation's wealth so deeply that the corrupt system became commonly known as a ‘kleptocracy’. This system collapsed in May 1997 when the troops of lifelong rebel Laurent-Désiré Kabila, Joseph’s father, helped depose the already terminally ill Mobutu.
L-D ‘Mzee’ Kabila could only seize power in Congo with the massive military support of Rwanda and Uganda and the use of child soldiers. On August 1998. Rwanda and Uganda backed a rebellion against L-D Kabila's weak and corrupt government - a war dubbed “Africa's First World War” because of its similarities with what happened in Europe in 1914: nearly all the neighbouring countries and many armed non-state groups from the Congo as well as from other 'internal' was of the Africa Great Lakes region (Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Sudan). Troops mainly from Zimbabwe, Namibia, Chad and Angola secured the Kabila regime’s survival, whereas Uganda’s Museveni and Rwanda’s Kagame were the primary backers of the rebellion. Rwanda justified intervention in Eastern DRC by security concerns over Interahamwe rebels based in that part of the country. But there were also very important economic motivations behind Rwanda’s and Uganda’s actions.
In January 2001, L-D Kabila was assassinated by his bodyguards in circumstances that remain unclear, leaving his son Joseph in power.
The war bore destructive effects on the already very weak political structures, especially the de facto division of the country between the western and southern parts, controlled by the Kabila government and its allies, and large territories in the north and the east occupied by various rebel organisations, militias and intervening armies from the neighbouring countries. Infighting and power struggles about the control of the mineral wealth within the respective territories in the rebel held parts have resulted in a humanitarian catastrophe. Almost 90% of the war victims are civilians, mostly victims of starvation, disease and criminal violence as a result of the complete lawlessness. Rape has been widely used as a weapon in this war.
Although a peace deal signed in 2004 under South African auspices supposedly ended the ‘conventional’ war, fighting continues in the east of the country between rebel militia, the Congolese army and UN MONUC-forces (1), causing many civilian casualties. But despite the fact that the death toll of the crisis in Congo dwarfs that of Darfur or the December 2004 tsunami, the conflict still rages on virtually unnoticed by the mainstream media or the general public.
Since the start of the transitional government in June 2003, armed groups linked to neighbouring countries and corrupt Congolese government officials have continued illicit economic exploitation in the country. A three-year investigation by a Panel of Experts, convened by the United Nations Security Council in 2000, found that sophisticated networks of high-level political, military and business persons in cahoots with various rebel groups were intentionally fuelling the conflict in order to retain their control over the country’s natural resources. In a series of controversial reports, the Panel exposed the vicious cycle of resource-driven conflict that has taken hold of Congo.
“There's a worldwide profit interest that the present plundering mechanism stays in place. There are an enormous number of people siphoning off Congo's resources. It's all laid out in reports every one can read on the Internet. There's the Congo government elite, all kinds of European and North American firms, a huge number of African firms, and especially the elites from neighbouring countries. It's a very vast and complex network profiting from the war and its exploitation.”
In its October 2002 report, the Panel also accused dozens of western companies of violating a set of government-backed international standards for responsible corporate behaviour known as the ‘Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises’. The Panel felt it was necessary to bring to light the companies’ role in perpetuating the conflict. An April 2004 report by RAID (Rights & Accountability in Development), "Unanswered Questions: Companies, conflict and the Democratic Republic of Congo"(2), examined the UN Panel’s allegations against 40 companies and included additional evidence attesting to the companies' involvement in human rights violations, corruption and/or illegal resource exploitation. Most OECD governments refused to investigate the Panel’s allegations and in the face of their inaction, international NGOs started to file complaints and public awareness campaigns under the name ‘No Blood on my Cell Phone’, concerning the plunder of the very rare mineral coltan (3). About a dozen complaints alleging violations of the OECD ‘Guidelines for Multinational Enterprises’ were submitted to the American, Belgian, British, and Dutch governments (4).
“The government of the DRC must act promptly on the recommendations of a Congolese parliamentary investigation that uncovered illegal natural resource exploitation and profiteering from armed conflict”, said a leading group of international human rights, environmental and aid organisations in July 2006 (5).
In June 2005 the Lutundula Commission, a special Congolese National Assembly commission led by the courageous parliamentarian Christophe Lutundula, submitted a report on its investigations into mining and other business contracts that rebels and government authorities signed between 1996 and 2003. The report found that dozens of contracts are either illegal or of limited value for the development of the country and it recommends their termination or renegotiation. It further recommends judicial action against a number of senior political and corporate actors involved in these operations. Discussion of the commission’s report by the National Assembly has already been postponed twice and due to a heavy parliamentary agenda, risks being further delayed. “For years, Congo’s politicians have struck deals that enrich themselves but provide no benefit to the Congolese public. Profits from such deals have often come at the cost of enormous suffering and loss of human lives”, said the coalition of NGOs.
The Lutundula Commission report draws attention to the ongoing illegal exploitation and recommends an immediate moratorium on the signing of new contracts until after the elections. While carrying out the investigation, some members of the commission were threatened and they found politicians, officials, and company executives unwilling to answer questions. Officials from the United Nations and the Belgian Senate, both of which had investigated natural resource extraction in the Congo between 2000 and 2003, withheld important information regarding some of the illegal deals, citing concerns over confidentiality.
In its report, the commission corroborates the central findings of the UN Panel of Experts and other investigations, which concluded that belligerents were motivated by their desire to exploit Congo’s mineral and economic wealth. Belligerents used some of their profits to finance further military operations that often involved widespread human rights abuses against civilians and violations of international humanitarian law.
“The message of war and transition in Congo is that violence works. Without a firm response, the destructive effects of this lesson are very likely to be felt for a long time to come”, explains Timothy Raeymaekers, a researcher working for the University of Ghent ‘Conflict Research Group’. The author see opportunities in improving the living conditions of the Congolese population by countering the systematic exploitation of Congo’s resources by a small but powerful elite. They give concrete recommendations in the field of agricultural reform, the mining sector and economic integration. Plundering from illegal mining by government officials and the irregular militias has been running into billions a year. "This is money that must be used for the benefit of the Congolese people" (6).
Notes:
(1)MONUC: the French abbreviation of United Nations Mission in Congo. 17,500 UN troops are today deployed in Congo. There are also many civilians working for MONUC in Congo. It’s the largest and most expensive UN operation ever.
(2) http://www.raid-uk.org/docs/UN_panel_DRC/unanswered_Questions_ES.pdf
(3) Coltan is the abbreviated name for columbo-tantalite, a rare metallic ore mainly used in mobile phone technology and laptop computers. Congo has 80 percent of the world's coltan, a strategic resource.
"The consumer may say 'yes, I do like using my mobile phone and playstation, but I don't particularly want to be complicit in child soldiers being used as slave labour in mines where the metals inside come from, and the plundering of Congo's resources”, said the campaign ‘No Blood on my Cell Phone’.
(4) The group of international and Congolese human rights, environmental and aid organisations (NGOs) includes:
- Association Africaine de Droit de l'Homme (ASADHO-Katanga)
- Broederlijk Delen /11.11.11 (Belgium)
- Centre National D'Appui Au Developpement et à la Participation Populaire (CENADEP)
- Fatal Transactions
- Friends of the Earth-USA
- Global Witness
- Groupe d'Appui Aux Exploitants des Ressources Naturelles (GAERN)
- Human Rights Watch
- International Crisis Group (Brussels - ICG)
- Netherlands Institute for Southern Africa (NiZA - Netherlands)
- Nouvelle Dynamique Syndicale (NDS)
- Organisation Concertée des Ecologistes et Amis de la Nature (OCEAN)
- Rights and Accountability in Development (RAID - UK)
- The Rainforest Foundation (UK)
(5) Links between ongoing violent conflict in the Great Lakes region and the exploitation of natural resources including gold, diamonds, timber, ivory and coltan are well-documented in a series of United Nations Security Council Expert Panel Reports published between 2001 and 2003, as well as the June 2004 report by Global Witness, ‘Same Old Story’ as by many reports by Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International.
(6) Conflict Research Group (University of Ghent), ‘Conflict and social transformation in Eastern Congo’, Gent, 2005. This study presents a strong plea for the inclusion of local dynamics and local NGOs in the current transition process in Congo.
The email newsletter of WRI's Global Initiative against War Profiteers || Index of past issues