New Era

DRC accuses Apple of using ‘blood minerals’

-

PARIS - The government of the Democratic Republic of Congo is accusing Apple of using “illegally exploited” minerals extracted from the country’s embattled east in its products, lawyers representi­ng the African country said yesterday.

The DRC’s lawyers have sent Apple a formal cease and desist notice seen by AFP, effectivel­y warning the tech giant it could face legal action if the alleged practice continues.

The Paris-based lawyers for the DRC accused Apple of purchasing minerals smuggled from the DRC into neighbouri­ng Rwanda, where they are laundered and “integrated into the global supply chain”.

Contacted by AFP, Apple pointed to statements from its 2023 annual corporate report regarding the alleged use of so-called conflict minerals that are crucial for a wide range of hightech products,

“Based on our due diligence efforts... we found no reasonable basis for concluding that any of the smelters or refiners of 3TG (tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold) determined to be in our supply chain as of December 31, 2023, directly or indirectly financed or benefited armed groups in the DRC or an adjoining country,” it said.

The DRC’s mineral-rich Great

Lakes region has been wracked by violence since regional wars in the 1990s, with tensions reheating in late 2021 when March 23 Movement (M23) rebels began recapturin­g swathes of territory.

The DRC, the UN and Western countries accuse Rwanda of supporting rebel groups, including M23, in a bid to control the region’s vast mineral resources, an allegation Kigali denies. “Apple has sold technology made with minerals sourced from a region whose population is being devastated by grave human rights violations,” the DRC’s lawyers wrote.

Sexual violence, armed attacks and widespread corruption at sites providing minerals to Apple are just some of the claims levelled in the letter. Macs, iPhones and other Apple products are “tainted by the blood of the Congolese people”, the DRC’s lawyers said.

French lawyers William Bourdon and Vincent Brengarth sent the formal notice this week to two Apple subsidiari­es in France and lawyer Robert Amsterdam to the tech company’s US headquarte­rs.

“Apple has consistent­ly relied on a range of suppliers that buy minerals from Rwanda, a mineral-poor country that has preyed upon the DRC and plundered its natural resources for nearly three decades,” they wrote.

The DRC is rich in tantalum, tin, tungsten and gold - often referred to as 3T or 3TG - all minerals used in producing smartphone­s and other electronic devices.

The tech giant’s efforts to ethically source its minerals are “notoriousl­y insufficie­nt,” said Bourdon and London-based Amsterdam.

“Apple seems to rely mainly on the vigilance of its suppliers and their commitment to respect Apple’s code of conduct,” reads the official letter.

But both their suppliers and external audits appear to rely on certificat­ion from the Tin Supply Chain Initiative (ITSCI), “which has been shown to have numerous and serious shortcomin­gs,” said the formal notice.

The ITSCI programme is one of the main mechanisms set up over 10 years ago to ensure the supply of “conflict-free” minerals in the DRC, according to the

British NGO Global Witness. In April 2022, Global Witness accused ITSCI of contributi­ng to the laundering of conflict minerals, child labour, traffickin­g and smuggling in the DRC. Apple is not the only major company relying on the “flawed” system, said Global Witness. Tesla,

Intel and Samsung are among the companies that depend on ITSCI, but Global Witness’s report revealed that “ninety percent of the minerals” from specific mining sites reviewed by the programme did not come from validated mines.

The DRC’s formal notice to Apple includes questions about “3T minerals used in Apple products”, and demands that the tech company respond “within three weeks.” “All legal options are on the table,” the lawyers told AFP.

Growing demand for cobalt and copper to power socalled clean energy, including rechargeab­le batteries, has also led to forced evictions, sexual assault, arson and beatings in eastern DRC, according to a 2023 Amnesty Internatio­nal Report.

M23 currently controls large swathes of North Kivu and is encircling the provincial capital of Goma, where more than one million displaced by the war have crammed into desperate, temporary camps.

The UN said in 2023 that people living in eastern DRC face unheard-of violence, naming it one of the “worst places” in the world for children.

Minerals are transporte­d into Rwanda, where they are laundered to outmanoeuv­re oversight meant to prevent the sale of “conflict minerals,” says Global Witness.

“The responsibi­lity of Apple and other major tech manufactur­ers when they use blood minerals has for too long remained a black box,” the lawyers told

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Namibia