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US Opinion Turning Against Conflict Minerals Law

iconAug 9, 2011 10:26
Source:SMM
The New York Times is latest leading US newspaper to voice criticism of the impact of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act on artisanal miners and their dependents in central Africa.

Aug. 9 (ITRI)-- The New York Times is latest leading US newspaper to voice criticism of the impact of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act on artisanal miners and their dependents in central Africa. The relevant section of the law is due to be reflected in SEC reporting rules shortly. The Times piece follows a similar leader in the Wall Street Journal last month. The New York Times article, published online yesterday and in today’s print version, is headlined “How Congress Devastated Congo” and described the impact as follows.

"Unfortunately, the Dodd-Frank law has had unintended and devastating consequences, as I saw first-hand on a trip to eastern Congo this summer. The law has brought about a de facto embargo on the minerals mined in the region, including tin, tungsten and the tantalum that is essential for making cellphones.

The smelting companies that used to buy from eastern Congo have stopped. No one wants to be tarred with financing African warlords — especially the glamorous high-tech firms like Apple and Intel that are often the ultimate buyers of these minerals. It’s easier to sidestep Congo than to sort out the complexities of Congolese politics — especially when minerals are readily available from other, safer countries.

For locals, however, the law has been a catastrophe. In South Kivu Province, I heard from scores of artisanal miners and small-scale purchasers, who used to make a few dollars a day digging ore out of mountainsides with hand tools. Paltry as it may seem, this income was a lifeline for people in a region that was devastated by 32 years of misrule under the kleptocracy of Mobutu Sese Seko (when the country was known as Zaire) and that is now just beginning to emerge from over a decade of brutal war and internal strife.

The pastor at one church told me that women were giving birth at home because they couldn’t afford the $20 or so for the maternity clinic. Children are dropping out of school because parents can’t pay the fees. Remote mining towns are virtually cut off from the outside world because the planes that once provisioned them no longer land. Most worrying, a crop disease periodically decimates the region’s staple, cassava. Villagers who relied on their mining income to buy food when harvests failed are beginning to go hungry.”

 

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