Tech giants sued over child deaths
Apple, Google named in US lawsuit for using young Congolese cobalt labourers
NEW YORK: Five US tech giants, including Apple, Microsoft and Google parent Alphabet, have been named in a lawsuit over the death of child labourers in cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Impoverished but mineral-rich DR Congo is the world’s largest producer of the rare metal, which is crucial for making batteries used in mobile phones and electric vehicles.
The case was lodged on Sunday in the name of 14 unidentified victims, who are members of the families of children killed in tunnel collapses, as well as children maimed as they worked.
It lists Apple, Alphabet, Dell, Microsoft and Tesla as defendants and was submitted by the International Rights Advocates (IRA) campaign group to a Washington tribunal.
A boom in the technological sector has led to a huge increase in the demand for cobalt, IRA said in its statement, adding the tech companies were aware the DR Congo’s mining sector relies on children.
Child miners work for US$2-3 (RM8.2-12.4) a day “under stone age conditions for paltry wages and at immense personal risk”, it said.
BMW, along with German chemical giant BASF and Samsung, announced a joint project to ensure “responsible” cobalt mining in DR Congo earlier this year.
The mining industry has said it wants to adopt standards of good governance to improve working conditions.
The London Metal Exchange recently adopted new ethical standards to ensure better traceability of raw materials, including cobalt. – AFP