The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Child labour – Apple stops buying cobalt from Congo

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APPLE said it has temporaril­y stopped buying cobalt mined by hand in Congo after a recent investigat­ion by British broadcaste­r Sky News, which found continuing problems with child labour and harsh work conditions.

The change comes several months after Apple said it planned to keep buying so-called “artisanal” cobalt from Congo while it worked to address the problems.

Cobalt is essential for the lithium-ion batteries found in laptops and smartphone­s, such as the iPhone. Sixty per cent of the world’s cobalt supply comes from Congo.

A Washington Post investigat­ion last year detailed abuses in Congo’s artisanal cobalt supply chain, showing how miners - including children - laboured in hazardous, even deadly, conditions. Amnesty Internatio­nal and other human rights groups also have alleged problems. The Post connected this troubling trade to Zhejiang Huayou Cobalt Company, a Chinese firm that is the largest buyer of artisanal cobalt in Congo and whose minerals are used in Apple products. Apple responded by pledging to clean up its cobalt supply chain, but the tech giant said it wanted to avoid hurting the Congolese miners by cutting them off.

That plan appears to have changed.

In a response to Sky’s revelation­s that the problems identified earlier were still prevalent, Apple said it has stopped buying cobalt from artisanal mines.

“We have been working with Huayou on a programme that will verify individual artisanal mines, according to our standards,” Apple said in a statement, “and these mines will re-enter our supply chain when we are confident that the appropriat­e protection­s are in place.”

Apple has said it intends to begin this year scrutinisi­ng its cobalt suppliers like it does its “conflict mineral” suppliers the tin, tungsten, tantalum and gold from Congo that companies are required by securities law to attempt to certify does not come from militia-controlled mines. Apple said it plans to publish a list of the cobalt smelters, just as it does for its conflict mineral smelters.

Sky News reported that children continued to be employed in the cobalt mining that feeds into Apple’s supply chain.

The report was centred on the former Katanga province of Congo, where Huayou Cobalt operates, although the Sky News report does not specify the locations.

A Huayou Cobalt spokesman told The Post that it was investigat­ing the allegation­s made in Sky News story and had asked the broadcaste­r for more details. — WP-Bloomberg

A Washington Post investigat­ion last year detailed abuses in Congo’s artisanal cobalt supply chain, showing how miners - including children - laboured in hazardous, even deadly, conditions.

 ??  ?? A boy carries a bag used to transport cobalt-laden dirt and rock at a mineral market outside Kolwezi, Congo, on June 7. A Washington Post investigat­ion found that child labour and unsafe working conditions are part of the cobalt mining process.—...
A boy carries a bag used to transport cobalt-laden dirt and rock at a mineral market outside Kolwezi, Congo, on June 7. A Washington Post investigat­ion found that child labour and unsafe working conditions are part of the cobalt mining process.—...

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