Stabroek News

Congo seizes gold worth $1.9 million in Okapi wildlife reserve

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KINSHASA, (Reuters) - Congolese authoritie­s have seized 31 kg of gold, worth around $1.9 million, in the Okapi Wildlife Reserve in the country's northeast, in a rare loss for smugglers who fraudulent­ly bring tonnes of Congolese gold into the global market each year.

Lieutenant Jean de Dieu Musongela, head of the military prosecutor's office in Mambasa, said on Tuesday the gold came from Muchacha, which he described as a mine in the Okapi reserve.

Mining in the reserve - a UNESCO World Heritage site, home to okapi, forest elephants, and other endangered species is illegal, but the Congolese mining registry shows Okapi covering a smaller area than on UNESCO's maps.

Three Congolese men were arrested, Musongela said, but another two men, who were Chinese, fled. The three suspects were taken to the provincial capital Bunia for further questionin­g.

"Not only are these people mining gold, they are also melting it," said Musongela, adding the authoritie­s did not know the extent of the operation.

In a report last week, the United Nations Group of Experts on the Congo said Muchacha is on mining concession

PE7657, owned by MCC Resources. The report said, citing photograph­ic evidence, that members of the Congolese armed forces were on the Muchacha site, in contravent­ion of Congolese law.

MCC Resources did not immediatel­y respond to an emailed request for comment.

The mine is around 200km from the Ugandan border, through which most of the province's gold is smuggled, Danny Munsense Muteba, head of investigat­ions at the Ituri mines ministry, said.

The UN experts, who have reported Kampala is a trading hub for smuggled gold from Ituri, said large-scale smuggling along this route continued in 2020.

Uganda's ministry of energy and mineral developmen­t did not immediatel­y respond to Reuters' request for comment.

Guillaume de Brier, a researcher at Internatio­nal Peace Informatio­n Service (IPIS), said estimates show Congo produced between 15 and 22 tonnes of gold last year, worth more than half a billion dollars, but levied just $72,000 of taxes.

"This means than 99% of the gold extracted in DRC is smuggled to neighborin­g countries," he said.

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