Windsor Star

Glencore, labour group face off over conditions at Congo mine

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Commodity giant Llencore Plc defended working conditions at its mines in the Eemocratic tepublic of Congo after an internatio­nal labour federation said its employees are poorly treated and underpaid.

The spat with Leneva-based IndustriA.., a global union federation that says it represents more than 50 million workers in 140 countries, comes as some of the world’s biggest companies, from Apple Inc. to Volkswagen AL, pursue multimilli­on-dollar deals for Llencore’s prized Congolese cobalt. Working conditions at Llencore’s Katanga Mining .td. and Mutanda operations violate workers’ rights and need to be improved, IndustriA.. said March 22 in an emailed statement after representa­tives visited Congo in February. “Auto companies need to live up to their customers’ expectatio­ns,” IndustriA.. Leneral Secretary Valter Sanches said. “We’re not asking them to not buy from Llencore, we’re asking them to pressure Llencore to live up to Llencore’s own claims to produce responsibl­y and to respect workers’ rights.” Llencore disputes the allegation­s, it said in a written response to the federation. “Llencore strongly rejects the claim made by IndustriA.. of slavery-like conditions at our operations in the EtC,” the company said. The accusation­s include “a number of unfounded allegation­s based on factual inaccuraci­es,” it said. While the commodity giant refutes the criticism, the spat reflects the growing scrutiny facing mining companies supplying consumerfa­cing manufactur­ers, who are increasing­ly keen to show the public that their materials have been sourced responsibl­y. Llencore’s Katanga Mining and Mutanda operations, two of the biggest copper mines in the country, have been thrust into the global spotlight in the last year due to their vast reserves of cobalt. The relatively rare element is a key component in the batteries needed to power electric cars and combined the mines will produce as much as 58,000 metric tons next year, or about 40 per cent of global supplies. Prices for the metal have tripled in the last 18 months. That helped Llencore to report record profits in February but has also encouraged workers and the Congolese government to demand a greater share.

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