Fiche du document numéro 32396

Num
32396
Date
Thursday December 8, 2022
Amj
Auteur
Taille
5041631
Titre
Armed conflict, insecurity, and mining in eastern DRC
Lieu cité
RDC
Résumé
This report offers a new framework for looking at the eastern Congo conflict, one within which new evolutions of the past twenty years find a place. Indeed, violent conflict in eastern Congo has changed dramatically in all its aspects over the past two decades. Yet too often policymakers and observers appear to assume that we are dealing with a proxy war orchestrated from the DRC’s eastern neighboring countries. The over-simplified and incorrect narrative is then that large rebel movements are directed by neighboring countries to satisfy their insatiable hunger for "conflict minerals". Still according to this simplified version of the facts, we find the civilian population and the weak, Congolese government on the side of the victims. If this narrative was true at the time of the great Congolese wars around the turn of the millennium, it hardly applies today. More so, to the extent that such a perspective guides policy and donor interventions, it sometimes threatens to produce effects that add to the level of conflict in the region. We can think of the martial law declared by the Congolese government in May 2021, or of "responsible sourcing" programs that, by adopting an incorrect macro-perspective, ignore local sensitivities and thereby foster conflict. It was therefore high time to, in partnership with USAID, launch a new reflection on the drivers, causes and actors that together define the nature of the conflict in eastern Congo. In doing so, we note that the conflict has become atomized over the last two decades. That is, the different aspects of conflict and their interaction can vary considerably from location to location. Within this fragmented conflict landscape, depending on the location, a range of drivers other than just "conflict minerals" can be observed. Further analysis shows that, for example, the broader issue of land ownership may be at stake and that armed actors may just as well be concerned with proceedings derived from agriculture as they are with mining revenues. As for the causes of conflict today, we see that, for example, corruption among government officials, poorly executed DDR programs or the continued existence of auto-defense groups with no raison d’être that sustain themselves with mining revenues, are of greater importance than the mere presence of resources in Congolese soil. In terms of conflict actors, a great fragmentation can also be observed. In local conflicts, we find ex-rebels struggling to find their way into civilian life, as well as units of the Congolese army, which often strike deals with non-state actors. Not infrequently, conflict is also a matter of communities battling each other, with the "ethnic divisions" artificially created by the colonizer sometimes being whipped up again by opportunistic leaders. Finally, the study also shows that the regional dimension is still important for understanding the full context of the conflict. Regional trade chains of commodities – including minerals – and bilateral (military) cooperation give rise to geopolitical tensions. This also seems to be an important element in the resurgence of M23.
Source
Type
Rapport
Langue
EN
Citation
Armed conflict, insecurity,
and mining in eastern DRC
Reflections on the nexus between natural
resources and armed conflict

International Peace
Information Service vzw

EDITORIAL
Armed conflict, insecurity, and mining in eastern DRC:
Reflections on the nexus between natural resources and armed conflict

Antwerp, December 2022

Front cover image: Artisanal miners transporting minerals, Mambasa territory, Ituri, 2017.

Authors: Ken Matthysen & Erik Gobbers

Suggested citation:
Matthysen, K. & Gobbers, E., Armed conflict, insecurity, and mining in eastern DRC: Reflections on the
nexus between natural resources and armed conflict, (IPIS, Antwerp, 2022), 40p.

Layout: Sakado

International Peace Information Service (IPIS) is an independent research institute providing tailored
information, analysis, policy advice and capacity enhancement to support those actors who want to
realize a vision of durable peace, sustainable development and the fulfillment of human rights.

D/2022/4320/12

DISCLAIMER
This document was produced by IPIS with the support from the Integrated Land and Resource Governance
Task Order, under the Strengthening Tenure and Resource Rights II (STARR II) IDIQ.
This publication is made possible by the support of the American People through the United States
Agency for International Development (USAID). The contents of this publication are the sole responsibility
of IPIS and do not necessarily reflect the views of USAID or the United States government.

2

1. TABLE OF CONTENTS
EDITORIAL............................................................................................................................................. 2
ABBREVIATIONS................................................................................................................................... 4
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY......................................................................................................................... 5
1. INTRODUCTION..............................................................................................................................11
2. CONCEPTS AROUND CONFLICT FINANCING.............................................................................. 13
3. LINK BETWEEN ‘INSECURITY’, ‘MINING’, AND ‘MINERAL TRADE’ NOWADAYS...................... 15
3.1.

Armed groups’ mineral revenues......................................................................................................................16
3.1.1. Ituri........................................................................................................................................................................................................17
3.1.2. North Kivu......................................................................................................................................................................................... 18
3.1.3. South Kivu..........................................................................................................................................................................................19

3.2. FARDC........................................................................................................................................................................ 20
4. RELATED ISSUES TO CONSIDER................................................................................................... 23
4.1.

Access to land.......................................................................................................................................................... 23

4.2. Intercommunity tensions.................................................................................................................................... 25
4.3. DDR and stabilization........................................................................................................................................... 26
4.4. Governance and corruption............................................................................................................................... 27
4.5. Mining reform and formalization .................................................................................................................... 29
4.6. Supply chain actors local to regional...............................................................................................................31
4.7.

Companies and investors rush on gold and minerals............................................................................... 33

5. CONCLUSIONS................................................................................................................................ 36
6. BIBLIOGRAPHY.............................................................................................................................. 38

3

ABBREVIATIONS
ADF

Allied Democratic Forces

AGR

African Gold Refinery

ASM

Artisanal and Small-scale Mining

BGR

German Federal Institute of Geosciences and Natural Resources

CLS

Comité Local de Suivi

CNDP

Congrès National pour la Défense du Peuple

CNPSC

Coalition Nationale du Peuple pour la Souveraineté du Congo

CODECO Coopérative pour le Développement Économique du Congo
COOPERAMMA

Coopérative des Exploitants Artisanaux Miniers de Masisi

CPS

Comité Provincial de Suivi

CTS

Comité Territorial de Suivi

DDR

Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration

DRC

Democratic Republic of Congo

EAC

East African Community

FARDC

Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du Congo (national army)

FDLR

Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda

FNI

Front des Nationalistes Intégrationnistes

FPIC

Force Patriotique et Intégrationniste du Congo

FRPI

Force de Resistance Patriotique de l’Ituri

ICGLR

International Conference on the Great Lakes Region

ILRG

Integrated Land and Resource Governance Program

IPIS

International Peace Information Service

KST

Kivu Security Tracker

NDC-R

Nduma Défense du Congo – Rénové

OECD

Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development

P-DDRCS Programme de Désarmement, Démobilisation, Relèvement Communautaire et
Stabilisation
PMH

Police des Mines et Hydrocarbures (Mining Police)

RCD

Rassemblement Congolais pour la Démocratie

RINR

Regional Initiative against the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources

SAKIMA Société Aurifère du Kivu et du Maniema
SMB

Société Minière de Bisunzu

UAE

United Arab Emirates

UPC

Union des Patriotes Congolais

UPDF

Ugandan People’s Defense Forces

USAID

United States Agency for International Development

4

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
The concepts of ‘mining’ and ‘conflict financing’ have been closely linked in conflict analyses in eastern
Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) over the past 20 years. The conflict, as well as conflict financing, has
however changed considerably in eastern DRC over the past twenty years. It is therefore necessary to
reconsider the concept of ‘conflict minerals’, as new types of conflict linked to mining have occurred, and
more different types of actors are involved than before.

A. Link between mining and conflict financing
While the link between ‘natural resources’ and ‘conflict’ has been much discussed in literature, the two
are undeniably linked in eastern DRC. The exact relationship is however up for discussion. Le Billion (2012)
groups the analytical frameworks in three main categories: ‘resource conflict’ refers to conflicts resulting
from competition over resources; ‘conflict resources’ provide the opportunity to finance belligerents’
war efforts; and the ‘resource curse’ argument highlights the risks around poor resource governance. It
is important to realize that none of these arguments provide a full explanation for this link, but rather
complement each other.
• Large-scale armed conflict over DRC’s mineral wealth (i.e. the ‘resource conflicts’ argument) has
decreased significantly over the past twenty years. Nevertheless, at the local level conflicts over
resources are still common. These conflicts regularly devolve into violence, and stakeholders often
turn to armed actors (either armed groups or state security forces) to protect their claim to land or
resources. Additionally, the exploitation of minerals by (foreign) companies in eastern DRC has led to
social tensions and has spurred armed group activity on multiple occasions;
• Most armed groups in eastern DRC were created for ideological or security reasons (often ‘self-defense’
against other armed groups or ethnic communities that are perceived as a threat). Exploitation of
natural resources (especially gold) provides economic opportunities for many armed groups to survive
(‘conflict resources’ argument). Units from the national army (FARDC) are also eager to get involved in
the mining business and consolidate the situation of insecurity in eastern DRC.
• The DRC is considered to be one of the most fragile states worldwide, maybe even exacerbated
by the ’resource curse’. State authority is absent in remote mining areas, which undermines the
implementation of mining regulation. In other mining zones state agents perform poorly, engaging
in corruption and showing predatory behavior. Scholars have however also warned against the use of
the concept ‘failed state.’ Even though the state is malfunctioning in DRC, “its institutions continue to
operate one way or another, and governance is being negotiated between a wide range of state and
non-state actors on a daily basis.”1
The full report provides a brief overview of some illustrative armed groups in the provinces of Ituri, North
Kivu and South Kivu and how they extract revenue from the mining sector, as well as their financing
modalities more in general.

1

Wakenge C.I., M.-R. Bashwira Nyenyezi, S.I. Bergh, and J. Cuvelier, “From ‘conflict minerals’ to peace? Reviewing mining reforms,
gender, and state performance in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo”, The Extractive Industries and Society, 8, 2 (2021).

5

B. Other factors contributing to conflict and insecurity
It is important to acknowledge not only the complexity of the nexus between natural resources and
violent conflict, but also to identify potential other drivers of conflict, or factors contributing to the
perpetuation of long-standing (local) conflicts. Although natural resources have played an important
role in several armed struggles, analyzing armed conflict through a natural resources lens runs the risk of
tunnel vision, oversimplification, and overlooking other factors fueling conflicts, and/or other sources of
financing for armed groups.
Drivers of conflict tend to go from very local disputes - over land, (lack of) access to resources, (customary)
power and identity - up to national problems (including political instability, political distrust and
governance issues such as corruption, kleptocracy, and weak institutions), and the regional dimension
– including refugees, interstate tensions, and cross border (trade) networks.2 Several armed groups in
eastern DRC prey on local discontent over these conflict drivers to legitimize their existence. All of these
elements will be discussed below.
Additionally, there are a number of factors that help to explain why conflict actors have persisted for
more than 2 decades in eastern DRC. The presence of ‘foreign’ armed groups – or perceived as foreign
- and state fragility in the eastern provinces led to the proliferation of self-defense groups, including
Mai Mai groups, Nyatura and Raïa Mutomboki. Combined with the absence of efficient demobilization
programs for these groups, it resulted in a situation where an estimated 120 armed groups operate in
eastern DRC.3 The Kivu Security Tracker (KST) highlights the “inertia of the conflict” as most armed
groups have existed for many years in eastern DRC, in their current or previous incarnations, and try to
survive by generating income. Income generation includes the extraction of natural resources, but also
alternative sources of income, including roadblocks, kidnapping for ransom and illegal taxation.
Several factors contribute to this inertia, including the FARDC’s underperformance, failed DDR-processes,
social dissatisfaction, a lack of political will and rent-seeking behavior by conflict parties. Concerning the
latter element, while many of the armed groups in eastern DRC have been established as self-defense
groups, over time, illegal predation has become an important reason of existence and at times seems to
have supplanted the ideological factor.

B.1 Forces Armées de la République Démocratique du Congo (FARDC)
A crucial issue to tackle both insecurity and conflict financing in eastern DRC, is to deal with the FARDC
performance. For a decade, IPIS mines mapping work has revealed that FARDC units are the armed actor
that can be observed most often interfering in the mining business, and increasingly so. The military has
developed several illegal revenue-generating practices, including roadblock taxation, racketeering
and extortion in natural resources sectors, and operating as private security guards to secure mining
operations.
Resource revenues for military people can explain the inertia with regards to armed groups in eastern
DRC. The continued presence of these armed groups ‘legitimizes’ the army unit’s deployment, which
enables them to develop their economic activities, including interference in mining. Multiple examples
exist of FARDC and nearby armed groups that coexist and have arrangements with regards to the division
of revenues from the local mining business.
The FARDC’s role in the consolidation of the illegal exploitation of natural resources, and even financing
insecurity, raises questions on the efficiency of the state of siege that had been declared by president
Tshisekedi’s government in May 2021 to cope with escalating violence in Ituri and North Kivu.

2
3

Autesserre S., The Trouble with the Congo: Local violence and the failure of international peacebuilding. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2010, pp. 142-146.
Kivu Security Tracker, The Landscape of Armed Groups in Eastern Congo: Missed opportunities, protracted insecurity and self-fulfilling
prophecies, February 2021. KST is a joint project of the Congo Research Group and Human Rights Watch.

6

B.2 Access to land
Landownership, customary land rights, and access to land in general, are key drivers of conflict in eastern
DRC, especially at the local level. Disputes over land can pitch entire communities against each other.
Access to land often also plays an important role in mining disputes. Demarcation of mining concessions
and mining sites, or compensation to the landowner of a mining site, are for example important sources of
local conflict (e.g. between mining cooperatives, between cooperatives or artisanal miners and industrial
concession holders, and between miners and farmers). Mining is intrinsically linked to land.

B.3 Intercommunity tensions
Access to natural resources in eastern Congo is regularly linked to inter-community tensions. However,
one should be careful not to consider ethnicity as a primordial conflict driver. Ethnicity has been
socially constructed during the colonial period. Local entrepreneurs can manipulate ethnic identities
to compete for access to resources; ethnic cleavages are invoked through a political struggle against
marginalization and socio-economic inequality.4 It is always a delicate exercise to analyze the ethnic
dimension in conflicts and access to resources. It is important to avoid narrow ethnic analysis of
violence.
Armed militia are often instrumentalized by local elites, applying ethnic and autochthony discourses,
to achieve political and economic goals.5 On the other hand, armed groups regularly also exploit local
communities’ feelings of discontent to legitimize their activities. This does not mean however that they
therefore represent the community.

B.4 DDR and stabilization
Although the presence of natural resources, and in particular of minerals, plays an important role in
survival strategies of non-state armed groups in eastern DRC, it does not fully explain why armed groups
remain mobilized or re-mobilize after a period of ostensible peace.
In the past decades, the Congolese government has made several unsuccessful attempts to set up socalled DDR programs to dismantle non-state armed groups and to facilitate the return of former rebels
to civilian life. A range of issues helps to explain the failure of DDR up to date, including continuous
security concerns, manipulation by political elites, lack of incentives for armed group members, lack of
social integration strategies and fear of relocation.6 Vlassenroot et al. (2020) also developed the concept
of circular return to explain persistent local armed group activity.7 Militia members navigate continuously
between civilian and combatant life: their motives exceed political and economic interests, and often
include individual interests. Finally, there is a general lack of financial means for the DDR programs and
there are substantial program delays.
In July 2021, President Félix Tshisekedi announced the creation of another demobilization program,
Programme de Désarmement, Démobilisation, Relèvement Communautaire et Stabilisation
(P-DDRCS), which results from a merger of existing programs. Several observers have however raised
their doubts on the potential of this revamped DDR process.

4
5
6
7

Vermeersch P., Theories of ethnic mobilization: Overview and recent trends, Leuven: CRPS Working paper No. 3, 2011, pp. 6-7.
Verweijen J. and J. Brabant, “Cows and guns. cattle-related conflict and armed violence in Fizi and Itombwe, eastern DR Congo”, The
Journal of Modern African Studies, 55, 1 (2017), 1-27, p. 23.
Vogel C. and J. Musamba, Recycling rebels? Demobilization in the Congo. Rift Valley Institute, PSRP Briefing Paper 11, March 2016, pp. 3-4.
Vlassenroot K., E. Mudinga and J. Musamba, “Navigating social spaces: Armed mobilization and circular return in eastern Congo”,
Journal of Refugee Studies, 33, 4 (2020), 832-852.

7

B.5 Governance and corruption
A full understanding of armed actors’ interference in mining should be considered in the wider context
of mining governance, and in particular corruption, in eastern DRC. The functioning of Congolese state
institutions is seriously challenged by clientelism and kleptocracy, leading to issues such as corruption.
State officials often play a crucial role in the persistence of illegal trade, and their illegal interference in
ASM is omnipresent. These practices sustain a climate of predation, 8 undermine the state, and enable
smuggling and “conflict financing” to persist.
Mining actors do not feel they enjoy any support from the state, such as technical support, or peaceful
resolution of mining conflicts.9 Consequently, they look for alternative (non-official) ways to resolve
disputes and to protect their claims. People turn to the military or police to settle their argument with
conflicting parties, or even to shelter them from state oversight. In some instances, people even turn to
armed groups to protect them against taxation - or predation - by state agents.
Finally, the very same state institutions that are struggling with clientelism and corruption, are key
partners for the implementation of international donor-funded programs, including DDR, stabilization,
and responsible sourcing.10 Their malfunctioning weakens and undermines these initiatives.

B.6 Mining reform and formalization
The DRC mining sector has undergone several structural reforms. An increasing number of governmental,
international and private initiatives have been launched to formalize the country’s artisanal mining sector,
and to promote more responsible sourcing practices.
While responsible sourcing initiatives have made considerable progress to discourage armed interference
in the (3T) artisanal mining sector, a wide range of challenges persist, and further progress seems to be
very limited over the past few years:
• Mining reform in eastern DRC has created additional barriers to access resources for most stakeholders,
and as such nurtures socio-economic inequality;
• Long-term peaceful solutions require inclusive approaches, while responsible sourcing initiatives have
often used strategies of exclusion, risking to increase tensions and conflict;
• The narrow focus on conflict minerals resulted in a neglect of the development potential of ASM. As
miners claim it has not brought them any additional revenues, it raises the question on the sustainability
of the current situation.
Listing all of the above issues, one could even question to what extent the principle of ’Do No Harm’
has been considered while implementing responsible sourcing in eastern DRC. DRC civil society actors
claim that since 2010, no proper and transparent evaluation of responsible sourcing efforts have been
organized. A profound evaluation of the work and results of these systems, co-managed by different DRC
stakeholders, is therefore direly needed.

8
9

Wakenge C.I. (October 2020), op. cit.
Many state agents are hardly trained and have little knowledge of the sector. As they often do not receive a salary, they need
to turn to miners to make a living.
10 Sungura A. et al. (May 2021), op. cit., p. 57.

8

B.7 Supply chain actors local to regional
Interference by foreign armed groups, or armed groups supported by DRC’s neighboring countries
decreased steadily over the past fifteen years. While ‘conflict minerals’ were originally a Central African
regional issue, nowadays, an internal DRC strategy to tackle ‘minerals financing insecurity’ has become
more important.
Nevertheless, the regional mineral supply chain - from the mines, through border towns and regional
trading hubs, to the international market - is an important factor when analyzing the role of mining in
the persistence of insecurity. For decades, it has been an enormous challenge to channel these minerals
in legal supply chains. Both within DRC, as across the border, a wide range of stakeholders, including
formal institutions, are involved in cross-border smuggling to Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda. Especially
for gold, smuggling occurs everywhere. The organization IMPACT concluded that legal production and
trade of gold were not commercially viable under the current market conditions in eastern DRC, as their
responsible gold project could not compete with gold prices from the informal market.11

B.8 Companies and investors rush on gold and minerals
An increasing number of (foreign) enterprises have ventured into the risky investment environment of
eastern DRC looking for mineral resources. Such exploitations have often been a source of tension that
can result in additional insecurity and violence. These tensions revolve around access to resources, nonrespect of (in)formal modalities to acquire access to land and resources, local communities’ perception of
non-respect of local development priorities, etc.
In 2021, a range of Chinese semi-industrial mining companies were heavily criticized for their practices
and behavior in the provinces of South Kivu and Ituri. They used small Congolese mining cooperatives
as front companies to get access to the ASM permits. There have been complaints on the environmental
impact, and lack of state oversight of these semi-industrial mining companies. On top of that, they used
Congolese security forces as private security guards. Most worrying is how it culminated in violence and
targeted attacks.
Many more mining companies have faced violent and armed resistance over the past years. In several
cases, such as Leda Mining and Banro, armed groups even interfered to stand up against these companies.
Companies often tend to consistently refer to artisanal miners that are working on their concessions as
‘illegal miners’. Such language use has a polarizing effect and contributes to local conflict over minerals.
Verweijen (2017) explains how “Armed groups and local strongmen capitalise on widespread anger” towards
mining companies.12 Consequently, the attacks against these companies are not just banditism, but are
rooted in the deeper socio-economic situation, and at times are even politically inspired.

11 UN Group of Experts, Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 2 June 2020, S/2020/482, § 66.
12 Verweijen J., Shedding light on why mining companies in eastern Congo are under attack, The Conversation, 30 august 2017.

9

C. Conclusions
Large-scale armed conflict over DRC’s mineral wealth has decreased significantly over the past twenty
years. Nevertheless, mining and mineral trade still play an important role in ongoing armed and unarmed
conflicts in eastern DRC. We have identified largely three direct ways that link mining and conflict, and
insecurity more generally. First, at the local level, conflicts over access to resources are still common.
Second, over the past two decades, self-defense groups (including Mai Mai, Nyatura and Raïa Mutomboki
groups) have mushroomed ‘to protect local communities’ against external threats (including FDLR and
foreign business interests). These armed groups now use mineral resources, among other sources of
income, to survive. Many of them grew out of their ideological strife, and rent-seeking incentives have
become more prominent. Third, FARDC (national army) units are the most prominent armed actors
interfering in the mining business.
Despite progress in the 3T sector, there is dissatisfaction among most stakeholders on mining reform,
and on the implementation of responsible sourcing efforts in particular (traceability, CLS, etc.). This
dissatisfaction however hardly seems to be heard. Mining reform and formalization are tools which can
contribute to make mineral supply chains clean(er), but they do not tackle the root causes of most of
the ongoing armed and non-armed conflicts in eastern DRC.
This report discusses the wide range of interrelated issues that drive conflict and interact with mineral
conflict financing, including: land issues, inter-community tensions, social inequality, DDR, poor natural
resource governance, regional supply chains and a regional rush on resources.
There is an urgent need for a profound, participative evaluation process that scrutinizes the ASM
sector as a whole, and the performance and effectiveness of responsible sourcing initiatives in particular.
In order to yield sustainable results, responsible sourcing initiatives must take into account the different
dimensions and factors discussed in this paper, and must incorporate the broader range of issues that
interface with conflict and mining: focusing only on one dimension (e.g. trying to guarantee clean supply
chains), and ignoring historical, cultural, social, economic and political contexts in which ASM takes place
in eastern Congo, is a recipe for failure.

10

1. INTRODUCTION
The concepts of ‘mining’13 and ‘conflict financing’14 have been closely linked in conflict analyses in
eastern Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) over the past 20 years. The relationship between mining and
conflict financing continues to be debated tackling questions like, whether there is a causal relationship
or not, whether mining merely fuels existing conflict dynamics, and whether responsible mining efforts
can help to decrease conflict.
The International Peace Information Service (IPIS) has mapped mining areas in eastern DRC since 2009, to
better understand the link between mining and minerals trade on the one hand, and armed groups and
insecurity on the other.
In July 2021, IPIS started a new project ‘Investigating conflict financing, due diligence and socio-economic
dynamics along artisanal mining supply chains in the DRC,’ financed by the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) Integrated Land and Resource Governance (ILRG) program. IPIS
aims to map and collect data from 550 Artisanal and Small-scale Mining (ASM) sites and supply chains in
eastern DRC.15 This provided an opportunity to qualitatively examine the basic link between ‘mining’
and ‘conflict’ – and ‘insecurity’ more generally16 - in eastern DRC. Over the past twenty years, the
situation has evolved. First, new insights have emerged on the relationship between ‘mining’ and
‘conflict,’ revealing that the link is quite complex and often indirect, that economic dimensions are often
interlinked with political and social dimensions, and that armed groups rely on a diverse set of financing
modalities. Second, the conflict, as well as conflict financing, has changed considerably in eastern DRC.
Wakenge (2020) stressed the need to “deconstruct” the notion of ‘conflict minerals’,17 and to redefine
the concept as new types of conflict linked to mining have occurred, and more actors are involved than
before.18
Based on existing literature, and interviews with some key stakeholders, this report analyses how
the link between ‘mining’ on the one hand, and ‘conflict’ and ‘insecurity’ on the other, has changed
over the past twenty years in eastern DRC. Additionally, we provide a more holistic analysis of the
interplay between ‘mining’, ‘insecurity’ and ‘conflict financing’ by incorporating a range of other issues
that intersect with conflict financing and mining, including access to land, intercommunity tensions,
governance, and the regional dimension. In 2023, IPIS will publish a set of qualitative case studies that
will dig into this complex relationship.

13 In eastern DRC, ‘mining’ mostly concerns the artisanal exploitation, and trade, of minerals.
14 ‘Conflict financing’ includes the activities, modalities and relationships that generate revenues for conflict actors to pay for the
costs of their armed struggle. Analysis into this phenomenon, however, often goes beyond the direct financing of these costs, and
it looks at the wider economic agenda behind violence, such as competition over access to resources, and ‘personal enrichment’ of
commanders or other supporters. Wennmann provides an interesting summary of ‘conflict financing’ and the economic dimension
of armed groups (Wennmann A., “Economic dimensions of armed groups: profiling the financing, costs, and agendas and their
implications for mediated engagements,” International Review of the Red Cross, 93, 882 (2011), 333-352).
15 IPIS, Understanding Artisanal Mining Supply Chains and Conflict Financing in DRC, June 2021, https://ipisresearch.be/project/
understanding-artisanal-mining-supply-chains-and-conflict-financing-in-drc/
16 A lot of ASM stakeholders are for example subjected to extortion or human rights violations by (armed) state actors, self-defense
groups, or bandits, that are not always directly linked to conflicts.
17 The OECD defines ‘Conflict minerals’ as ‘minerals from conflict-affected and high-risk areas’ and identifies these areas by ‘the
presence of armed conflict, widespread violence or other risks of harm to people.’ It further explains that ‘high-risk areas may
include areas of political instability or repression, institutional weakness, insecurity, collapse of civil infrastructure and widespread
violence. Such areas are often characterized by widespread human rights abuses and violations of national or international law’
(Source: OECD, OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas:
Second Edition, 2013, p. 13.).
18 Wakenge C.I., Prédation et violence à huis-clos: Artisanat minier et dynamiques des conflits à Fizi, Kalehe et Shabunda (Sud-Kivu, RD
Congo), October 2020, p. 6.

11

In response to concerns that armed groups were financing themselves through mineral resources, a wide
range of initiatives have been developed and implemented in eastern DRC since 2008. These include
traceability initiatives to define the origin of bags of minerals,19 due diligence initiatives that oblige
companies to assess the risks along their mineral supply chains,20 and certification mechanisms that
certify that the exploitation of mineral exports have respected a set of minimum standards.21 We refer to
them as ‘Responsible sourcing efforts’ in this report.
We believe that a more integrated analysis of ‘mining’, ‘insecurity’ and ‘conflict financing’ is crucial
for responsible sourcing efforts to become more efficient. While investments have been made over
the past fifteen years to break the link between mineral supply chains and conflict financing, levels of
insecurity have not diminished in eastern DRC. Trying to address this complex web of related factors
when designing responsible sourcing efforts, will surely improve their conflict sensitivity. A more conflictsensitive approach will lead to less tension around the implementation of these initiatives, and contribute
to a more sustainable impact.
The second section will briefly discuss some of the theoretical concepts of natural resources and conflict
financing. Furthermore, we will provide a very concise description of the history of ‘conflict minerals’ in
eastern DRC since the Congo Wars (1996-2003). Section three will describe the present-day interplay
between ‘mining’ and ‘mineral trade’ on the one hand, and ‘insecurity’ and ‘conflict financing’ on the
other hand. We will provide a brief overview of some of the main armed actors that are currently involved
in mineral resource extraction in the Kivu provinces and Ituri province. Section four discusses a list of
issues important for a good understanding of conflict financing and mining in eastern DRC of today.
Finally, section five provides concluding observations and remarks.

19 The iTSCi Programme for Responsible Mineral Supply Chains is the most important one in eastern DRC. The International Tin
Association (ITA)’s programme iTSCi monitors mineral supply chains in eastern DRC. It implements traceability by providing labels
to Congolese state agents, so that they can tag 3T mineral production at the mine site and along the trade route to verify the origin
of the minerals further down the chain. Furthermore, it also implements related activities to monitor the supply chains, including
incident reporting, risk management, etc. Besides iTSCi, there are other smaller traceability initiatives such as Better Sourcing
Program (BSP), and the state-led gold traceability system ‘Initiative pour la traçabilité de l’or artisanal’ (ITOA).
20 The best known is the due diligence guidance from the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD): OECD
(2013), op. cit.
21 For example, the Regional Certification Mechanism (RCM) of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), or the
Certified Trading Chains (CTC) programme of the German Federal Institute for Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR).

12

2. CONCEPTS AROUND CONFLICT FINANCING
While the link between ‘natural resources’ and ‘conflict’ has been much discussed in literature, the two
are undeniably linked in eastern DRC. The exact relationship, however, is up for discussion. This section
briefly discusses some of the key concepts and the history of ‘conflict minerals’ in eastern DRC, while the
next section (3) zooms in on the present-day relationship between ‘natural resources’ and ‘conflict’.
The main source of revenue in eastern DRC’s conflict financing discussions are natural resources. They
are raw materials that occur in nature and can be used for economic production or consumption.22 DRC
holds a wide range of natural resources that are important for its local economy, as well as the regional
and international market, including minerals (e.g. gold, tin, cobalt, and copper), hydropower potential,
arable land (and agricultural produce such as cocoa), immense biodiversity, rainforest, and wood (and
charcoal). Within this report, we focus on the role of minerals in eastern DRC. More in particular, we will
build on IPIS’ existing expertise on the so-called 3TG minerals - notably Tin, Tantalum, Tungsten and Gold
in Ituri, Tanganyika, Maniema, North Kivu, and South Kivu.
An extensive list of academic literature exists on natural resources and conflict-financing. It is not the
objective of this briefing to provide an extensive overview of this. Some frameworks, however, are useful
to help to grasp the complex reality of conflict financing in eastern DRC.
First and foremost, for the full picture of dynamics of armed conflict in the DRC, it is important to
acknowledge not only the complexity of the link between natural resources and violent conflict,
but also to identify potential other drivers of conflict, or factors contributing to the perpetuation of
long-standing (local) conflicts. Although natural resources have played an important role in several
armed struggles, analyzing armed conflict through a natural resources lens runs the risk of tunnel vision,
oversimplification, and overlooking other factors fueling conflicts, and/or other sources of financing for
armed groups. Although the attention is often mainly focused on the illicit extraction and trade of natural
resources (particularly minerals), the political economy of armed conflicts is more diverse: Wennmann
(2007) argues that “Conflict is financed by a multitude of methods and their combination in various times
and places makes conflict financing inherently dynamic. Organized armed groups adapt their behavior
and shift to other methods of conflict financing in response to external policies levied against them.”23
In section 3, we will discuss some of the alternative sources of financing, and in section 4 we will discuss
other drivers and factors that interfere in the natural resources-security link.
A variety of arguments have been developed to explain the link between (armed) conflict and natural
resources, and minerals in particular. Le Billion (2012) groups them in three main categories: ‘conflict
resources’ that provide the opportunity to finance belligerents’ war efforts, ‘resource conflict’ refers to
conflicts resulting from competition over resources, and the ‘resource curse’ argument highlights the
risks around poor resource governance. It is important to realize that none of these arguments provide
a full explanation for this link, but rather complement each other.24 The most fundamental question is
probably about causality: are natural resources the source of conflict, or is the abundant availability of
natural resources rather an opportunity for armed actors to finance their ongoing armed struggle?
Rwanda and Uganda started the first Congo War (1996-1997) for political and security reasons, in order
to safeguard their interests in replacing the Congolese dictator Mobutu and restoring security in border
zones between Zaïre and Rwanda and Uganda. At the same time this war provided the opportunity to
Rwandan and Ugandan army officers to get a taste of the commercial potential of the mineral wealth in
(then) eastern Zaïre. The second Congo War (1998-2003) was much more economically motivated,
including access to and control over natural resources, and specifically about securing control over
promising mining zones. According to Turner (2007), Uganda’s decision to take part in this second war
was mainly inspired by economic ambitions: officers of the Ugandan army (Ugandan People’s Defense
Forces or UPDF) were eager to occupy Congolese territories with many gold and diamond mines; even
22 https://stats.oecd.org/glossary/detail.asp?ID=1740
23 Wennmann A., “The political economy of conflict financing: A comprehensive approach beyond natural resources”, Global
Governance, 13 (2007), 427-444, pp. 438-439.
24 Le Billon P., Wars of Plunder: Conflicts, profits and the politics of resources 2012, p. 27.

13

Ugandan president Museveni was reportedly involved in talks about setting up a business to export
natural resources.25
Large-scale armed conflict over DRC’s mineral wealth (i.e. the ‘resource conflicts’ argument) has
decreased significantly over the past twenty years.26 Nevertheless, at the local level conflicts over
resources are still common. These conflicts regularly devolve into violence, and stakeholders often turn
to armed actors (either armed groups or state security forces) to protect their claim to land or resources.
Additionally, the exploitation of minerals by (foreign) companies in eastern DRC has led to social tensions
and has spurred armed group activity on multiple occasions.
The DRC is considered to be one of the most fragile states worldwide27 – unable to effectively control
its territory and to provide basic security and development to its citizens in the east - maybe even
exacerbated by the “resource curse,” as weak institutions seem to promote kleptocracy and undermine
good governance. It helps to understand how access to resources in eastern DRC is not governed in a
consistent way. State authority is absent in remote mining areas, which undermines the implementation
of mining regulation, whereas in other mining zones state agents perform poorly, engaging in corruption
and showing predatory behavior. However, scholars have also warned against the use of the concept
‘failed state.’ Even though the state is malfunctioning in DRC, “its institutions continue to operate one
way or another, and governance is being negotiated between a wide range of state and non-state actors
on a daily basis.”28
In the next chapter (section 3), we illustrate that resources provide the opportunity for many armed
groups to survive (‘conflict resources’ argument), yet another factor explaining how minerals help to drive
insecurity in eastern DRC. In this section we will also discuss how units from the national army (FARDC)
are eager to get involved in the mining business, and as such consolidate the situation of insecurity in
eastern DRC.
Finally, we want to nuance once more the role that minerals play in survival strategies of non-state armed
groups in eastern DRC. It does not fully explain why local conflicts seem to persist forever, and armed
groups remain mobilized or re-mobilize after a period of ostensible peace.
In the past decades the Congolese government has made several unsuccessful attempts to set up socalled Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration Programs (DDR) to dismantle non-state
armed groups and to facilitate the return of former militiamen to civilian life (See section 4.3). Vlassenroot
et al. (2020) developed the concept of circular return to explain persistent local armed group activity.29
Militia members navigate continuously between social spaces, between civilian and combatant life: their
motives exceed political and economic interests, and often include individual interests. (Re-)joining an
armed group is about searching for new forms of belonging and identity, about being disappointed
regarding reintegration incentives, and about difficulties in finding one’s place in society.

25 Turner, T., Congo Wars: Conflict, myth and reality. London/New York: Zed Books, 2007, p. 40.
26 The UN Panel of Experts has reported on this in detail, e.g. UN Security Council, Report of the Panel of Experts on the illegal exploitation
of natural resources and other forms of wealth of the Democratic Republic of Congo, 12 April 2001, UN Doc. S/2001/357.
27 Fund For Peace, Fragile states index annual report 2022, 2022
28 Wakenge C.I., M.-R. Bashwira Nyenyezi, S.I. Bergh, and J. Cuvelier, “From ‘conflict minerals’ to peace? Reviewing mining reforms,
gender, and state performance in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo,” The Extractive Industries and Society, 8, 2 (2021).
29 Vlassenroot K., E. Mudinga and J. Musamba, “Navigating social spaces: Armed mobilization and circular return in eastern Congo,”
Journal of Refugee Studies, 33, 4 (2020), 832-852.

14

3. LINK BETWEEN ‘INSECURITY’, ‘MINING’, AND
‘MINERAL TRADE’ NOWADAYS
It is very hard to put one’s finger on conflict and insecurity in eastern DRC. Drivers of conflict tend to
go from very local disputes - over land, (lack of) access to resources, (customary) power and identity
- up to national problems (including political instability, political distrust and governance issues such
as corruption, kleptocracy, and weak institutions), and the regional dimension – including refugees,
interstate tensions, and cross border (trade) networks.30 Several armed groups in eastern DRC exploit
local discontent over these conflict drivers to legitimize their existence.
The presence of “foreign” armed groups since the beginning of the century - including Rassemblement
Congolais pour la Démocratie (RCD), Forces Démocratiques de Libération du Rwanda (FDLR) and Congrès
National pour la Défense du Peuple (CNDP) -31 and state fragility in the eastern provinces led to the
proliferation of self-defense groups, including Mai Mai groups, Nyatura and Raïa Mutomboki.
Combined with the absence of efficient demobilization programs for these groups, it resulted in a
situation where an estimated 120 armed groups operate in eastern DRC.32
Analyzing the current conflict situation, the Kivu Security Tracker (KST) said: “it is perhaps more important
to highlight the inertia of the conflict rather than to speak of new causes or triggers. Much of the violence
in the eastern Congo is driven by the need of armed groups, most of whom have existed in their current
or previous incarnations for many years, to survive by extracting resources and fighting for their turf.”33
Several factors contribute to this inertia, including the FARDC’s underperformance, failed DDR-processes,
social dissatisfaction, a lack of political will, and rent-seeking behavior by conflict parties. Concerning the
latter element, while many of the armed groups in eastern DRC have been established as self-defense
groups, over time, illegal predation has become an important reason of existence and at times seems to
have supplanted the ideological factor.
Before continuing to discuss the role of minerals in armed group financing, it is important to underline
that armed groups have multiple sources of income, and that insecurity in eastern DRC is not always
linked to minerals.34
The KST reported that taxation is the main source of alternative income for most armed groups in
eastern DRC, referring to roadblocks, token systems, and poll taxes.35 Schouten et al. (2017) point out
the economic importance of roadblocks in eastern DRC. A plethora of state and non-state armed
actors erect barriers – or a simple rope – along the roads to collect taxes on valuable goods (minerals,
timber, charcoal, agricultural products), but also on pedestrians and drivers passing by.36 Human Rights
Watch (HRW) documented several cases of kidnapping for ransom by armed actors in the territory of
Rutshuru, North Kivu.37 The UN Group of Experts described Mai Mai Yakutumba’s revenues from illegal

30 Autesserre S., The Trouble with the Congo: Local violence and the failure of international peacebuilding. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2010, pp. 142-146.
31 These armed groups were considered as “foreign” by the Congolese, because they were/are composed out of Rwandophone
combatants. RCD, one of the main armed actors during the second Congo War, fought against the government of President
Laurent-Désiré Kabila with the support of Rwanda and Uganda. FDLR, a Hutu-dominated group opposing the Rwandan Kagame
regime, was used by President Kabila as a proxy force against the Rwandan army and RCD. CNDP was created by Laurent Nkunda,
a former RCD officer who rejected integration in the Congolese army, and was considered as a Rwandan proxy armed group in
eastern Congo.
32 Kivu Security Tracker, The Landscape of Armed Groups in Eastern Congo: Missed opportunities, protracted insecurity and self-fulfilling
prophecies, February 2021. KST is a joint project of the Congo Research Group and Human Rights Watch.
33 Ibid., p. 8.
34 IPIS, Conflict analysis and stakeholder mapping in South Kivu and Ituri, commissioned by Madini project, April 2021, p. 15.
35 Kivu Security Tracker, The landscape of armed groups in eastern Congo: Missed opportunities, protracted insecurity and self-fulfilling
prophecies, February 2021, p. 11.
36 Schouten P., J. Murairi, and S. Kubuya, “Everything that moves will be taxed”: The political economy of roadblocks in North and South
Kivu. IPIS/DIIS/ASSODIP, November 2017.
37 HRW, DR Congo: Kidnappings skyrocket in east, Human Rights Watch, 16 December 2015, https://www.hrw.org/news/2015/12/16/drcongo-kidnappings-skyrocket-east.

15

logging and the trade of redwood.38 According to the Pole Institute, some non-state armed groups
such as FDLR shifted their economic focus from the artisanal mining sector to other economic activities
such as agriculture and leasing of land. In this respect it is noteworthy that the same types of human
rights abuses that are often linked to artisanal mining are also reported in the agricultural sector, where
armed groups for example impose forced labor on peasants.39 Finally, armed actors can profit from direct
financial or material support by local strongmen, such as politicians, or even external supporters. The UN
Group of Experts for example denounced the provision of material support to Mai Mai groups in South
Kivu by the Government of Burundi.40
Another remark is the observation that insecurity is not always linked with minerals. IPIS’ 2019 report41
illustrated how many of the security incidents in North Kivu (mapped by KST) did not overlap with
important artisanal mining areas.

Mining sites with armed interference in North Kivu, between 2013 and 2022, from IPIS’ map (left) and reported
security incidents, since April 2017, from Kivu Security tracker (right).

3.1. Armed groups’ mineral revenues
Due to fragmentation of armed groups, it is impossible to provide a full overview of the different
armed groups42 and their financing modalities. Nevertheless, we will discuss a few of the illustrative
armed groups here, and how they extract revenue from the mining sector.
Currently, most armed groups in eastern DRC were created for ideological or security reasons, often in
support of specific ethnic communities, claiming to defend their rights/claims (in the context of perceived
social injustice, land claims, etc.) and to protect them against “aggressors” (“self-defense” against other
armed groups or ethnic communities that are perceived as a threat to the own community). Exploitation
of natural resources is not (anymore) a direct reason for conflict, but the abundance of mines (especially
gold) provides economic opportunities to non-state and state armed actors: by controlling part of the
gold production and trade they can accumulate wealth and finance their armed presence (allowing them
to consolidate their control over economically important zones).

38
39
40
41

Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 10 June 2021, S/2021/560.
Interview with a representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February 2022.
Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 7 June 2019, S/2019/469.
IPIS, Mapping artisanal mining areas and mineral supply chains in eastern DR Congo: Impact of armed interference & responsible sourcing,
in collaboration with DIIS, April 2019, pp. 24-25.
42 The KST provides an excellent overview of armed groups in the Kivu provinces. More recently it also started mapping incidents in
Ituri province: https://kivusecurity.org/about/armedGroups.

16

3.1.1. Ituri
Conflict dynamics in the gold-rich province of Ituri are extremely complex, involving multiple non-state
armed groups (some of them originating from North Kivu), FARDC, and local political elites (see also
sections 3.2, 4.1).
Violence started flaring up again in Ituri in December 2017. Since then, local communities have been
devastated by brutal killings, sexual violence, large-scale and systematic destruction of houses, schools
and medical facilities, and massive displacements. The main armed actor in the current conflict is the
Lendu militia Coopérative pour le Développement Economique du Congo (CODECO). This group refers
to inter-ethnic tensions and socio-economic inequalities to legitimize its armed struggle against the
Hema community (See section 4.2). CODECO and its factions are considered responsible for most of the
atrocities committed in the past three years in several territories of Ituri province.
CODECO was initially active in the agricultural eastern part of Djugu (a region with few mines), where
they erected roadblocks to tax passers-by. They gradually moved to the western part of the territory,
where many gold mines are located. The artisanal gold mining sector has become an important source
of revenue for CODECO. In Djugu CODECO controls several mines, where the rebels impose taxes on the
production, or confiscate mining pits. They also violently pillage mines and mining villages.43 Early 2021
CODECO invaded the important concession of the company Mongbwalu Gold Mining (MGM), Djugu
territory, where they forced miners to exploit gold on the behalf of CODECO.44 Most of the gold produced
in this region is fraudulently exported to Uganda, where it is refined before exportation to Dubai.45
Hema created armed self-defense groups, named ‘Zaïre’, to protect Hema communities and gold
mining sites against attacks from CODECO.46 The Congolese army uses sometimes ‘Zaïre’ members to
fight CODECO. Initially founded due to security considerations, ‘Zaïre’ is getting more and more involved
in economic activities: they control some gold mines in Djugu where they levy taxes on the production,
or force miners to work for them. They also developed a system of ‘war taxes’ for shopkeepers in urban
centers (e.g. in Iga Barrière).47
The Force de Resistance Patriotique de l’Ituri (FRPI) resumed its activities as an armed group, after peace
talks failed at the end of 2020. The Lendu militia controls the Lendu chiefdom of Walendu Bindi in
Irumu, and claims to protect the local population against invasions of the Allied Democratic Forces
(ADF), an armed group of Ugandan origin that used to operate in the province of North Kivu but moved
into the province of Ituri, due to FARDC and Ugandan Army operations in North Kivu.48 FRPI controls
mines in Walendu Bindi and has reportedly expanded its radius of action into neighboring Andisoma,
the chiefdom of the Bira, where FRPI militiamen visit mines to levy taxes.49 The Bira have their own selfdefense militia, Force patriotique et intégrationniste du Congo (FPIC), which claims to protect the interests
of the Bira people, opposing Hema with whom the Bira have disputes over landownership. Reportedly
FPIC uses revenue from mine exploitation to buy arms. FPIC occasionally forms tactical alliances with
FRPI and CODECO against the Hema.50

IPIS, Persistent violence in gold-rich Ituri province, DR Congo: Root causes and impact on local populations, IPIS Briefing, August 2020.
Radio Okapi, “Ituri: les miliciens de la CODECO assiègent le carré minier de Mongwalu Gold Mining”, 29 January 2021.
Agenonga Chober A. and G. Berghezan, La CODECO, au coeur de l’insécurité en Ituri, Brussels: GRIP, 2021, p. 24
Ibid., pp. 11-12.
Interview a CSO representative, Bunia, February 2022; interview with a representative of Fédération des Coopératives, Bunia,
February 2022; IPIS, Analyse quantitative du secteur minier artisanal dans la region Bamuguba-Nord (Shabunda, Sud Kivu), Internal
report, October 2020.
48 Huguet A., “RDC: En Ituri sous état de siege une milice fait la loi sur son territoire,” La Libre, 21 January 2022, https://www.
lalibre.be/dernieres-depeches/afp/2022/01/21/rdc-en-ituri-sous-etat-de-siege-une-milice-fait-la-loi-sur-son-territoireJTD4N2GD65D6PNEJIGUIM3VA3M/ .
49 Interview with a CSO representative, Bunia, February 2022.
50 Interviews with several CSO representatives, Bunia, February 2022; see also Radio Okapi, “Ituri: Une coalition de 3 milices envisage
d’attaquer Irumu, alerte le député provincial Wilson Mugara”, 19 January 2021, https://www.radiookapi.net/2021/01/19/actualite/
securite/ituri-une-coalition-de-3-milices-envisage-dattaquer-irumu-alerte-le; and Radio Okapi, “Ituri: 10 personnes tuées à MumuKokonyagi par la coalition FPIC-CODECO”,16 January 2022, https://www.radiookapi.net/2022/01/18/actualite/securite/ituri-10personnes-tuees-mumu-kokonyagi-par-la-coalition-fpic-codeco.
43
44
45
46
47

17

Many members of local armed groups (including CODECO) are at the same time artisanal miners, which
makes it difficult to distinguish the fighter from the miner (see also section 4.3). This means that there
might be a link between artisanal mining cooperatives, which are ethnically organized, and armed
groups: some members of cooperatives would have leading positions in FPIC.51
Apart from local armed groups, several armed groups originating from neighboring North Kivu operate
now in Ituri, particularly in Irumu and Mambasa. The most notorious group from North Kivu is ADF. ADF
is considered responsible for several mass killings of civilians in Irumu in 2022.52 According to a local CSO,
the presence of ADF rebels has been recently reported in mines in the border zone with North Kivu. In
the past months, ADF incursions and pillages in several mine sites in the territory of Mambasa, have been
reported through IPIS’ Kufatilia incident reporting system.53 Mai Mai Mazembe, another armed group
form North Kivu, is now also active in the territory of Mambasa, where it seems to occasionally pillage
mine sites (several incidents with Mai Mai Mazembe in mines in Mambasa have been recently reported
by the Kufatilia incident reporting system). Mai Mai Mazembe was founded in 2016 in North Kivu to fight
FDLR, which had launched a massacre against the Nande community in the territory of Lubero. Mai Mai
Mazembe is also involved in artisanal mining in Lubero territory, North Kivu.54

3.1.2. North Kivu
Nduma Défense du Congo – Rénové (NDC-R) still controls a large territory in eastern DRC, including the
gold mining sites in it. It is one of the few examples that still respond to the traditional perception of
‘conflict minerals’, notably armed groups fighting directly for control over mineral resources. While it was
originally only based in Walikale territory, it expanded and clashed over gold mining sites in southern
Lubero in 2018.55 The UN Group of Experts reported last year about the clashes between several NDC-R
factions over the Matungu gold mine, in Walikale, in late 2020-early 2021.56 Furthermore, violent clashes
occurred regularly around the gold mines in Bamate chiefdom (Lubero) between NDC-R/Guidon (named
after the leader Guidon Shimiray Mwissa) and FPP/AP (Mai Mai Kabidon) throughout 2021.
NDC-R was recently split into the factions NDC-R/
Guidon and NDC-R/Bwira. FARDC supported
NDC-R/Bwira (named after the leader Gilbert
Bwira Shuo) in their fight against NDC-R/Guidon
(actually, the Congolese army used the Bwira
faction as a proxy to fight other armed groups).57
The history is repeating itself: NDC-R/Guidon was
a faction that split off from the historical NDC led
by Ntabo Ntaberi Sheka, and NDC-R was used by
FARDC as a proxy to fight other groups. NDC-R/
Guidon and NDC-R/Bwira are trying to control part
of the gold exploitation in North Kivu.58
A different type of conflict about mineral
Billboard of the mining cooperative COOPERAMMA
exploitation has been simmering for years in
Rubaya, in the territory of Masisi. Rubaya and its
coltan-rich area, are the scene of a long-lasting
conflict between Société Minière de Bisunzu (SMB) and Coopérative des Exploitants Artisanaux
51 Interview with a CSO representative, Bunia, February 2022.
52 Radio Okapi, “Ituri: 85 personnes tuées en 10 jours lors des incursions des rebelles”, 18 April 2022, https://www.radiookapi.
net/2022/04/18/actualite/securite/ituri-85-personnes-tuees-en-10-jours-lors-des-incursions-des-rebelles.
53 See IPIS - Dashboard of Incidents in Eastern DRC – Kufatilia, https://ipisresearch.be/publication/dashboard-incidents-eastern-drc/.
54 Save Act Mine, Le commerce illicite de l’or dans la region des Grands Lacs finance les groups armés à l’est de la RDC, Goma, April 2021.
55 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., p. 25.
56 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit., § 54-56.
57 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit.
58 Interview with a representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February 2022; interview with a CSO representative, Goma, February 2022.

18

Miniers de Masisi (COOPERAMMA). This conflict has multiple dimensions: 1) a dispute between a
large artisanal mining cooperative and a mining company; 2) a conflict over landownership (see also
section 4.1); 3) an economic conflict due to the power struggle between local politicians (the conflict is
politicized as the main characters in the dispute are well-known politicians); 4) a dispute between Hutu
and Tutsi (ethnic factor, instrumentalized by political ethnic leaders, see section 4.2); 5) and finally, this is
also about a disagreement between a mining company and a responsible sourcing initiative.
Edouard Mwangachuchu, a member of RCD-Goma during the second Congo War, founded the mining
company Mwangachuchu Hizi International (now SMB) that received a concession around Rubaya
from RCD-Goma. Around the same time, Robert Seninga, also an RCD-Goma member, founded the
mining cooperative COOPERAMMA (see section 4.2) Artisanal miners of COOPERAMMA work on the SMB
concession but SMB does not pay the miners properly, which causes serious tensions between SMB and
the cooperative. Clashes between police units and miners have been reported (in at least one incident
several miners were killed).59 Many COOPERAMMA miners are (ex-) members of Nyatura (a Hutu selfdefense militia, active in Masisi). There are indications that COOPERAMMA has provided arms to some
miners. As it is assumed that COOPERAMMA represents about 5000 young miners, the cooperative has
the potential to mobilize (see section 4.2).60
Mining sites on the SMB concession were covered by the traceability program iTSCi before 2019. While
SMB stated it left iTSCi due to rising costs of the certification scheme, other sources suggested that the
primary reason was due to tensions as SMB did not want iTSCi to report on violent incidents involving
police and FARDC, which happened on its mining sites.61

3.1.3. South Kivu
In the southern part of South Kivu, Mai Mai
Yakutumba has developed several income
streams. The UN Group of Experts reported on
evidence of income from illegal logging, the trade
of redwood, fishing taxes, support from members
of the Bembe community and gold mining.62 In
2020, IPIS reported the presence of Yakutumba
at 36 mining sites around Mukera and Misisi in
Fizi territory.63 They operate protection rackets,
holding off taxation by state services and fighting
against the establishment of Leda Mining. On the
other hand, there are also reports of collusion with
the FARDC in the gold trade.
For the last five years, Yakutumba is also leading
a local alliance of Mai Mai groups in the south of
South Kivu, notably the Coalition Nationale du
Peuple pour la Souveraineté du Congo (CNPSC).
Another interesting actor within the context
of natural resource exploitation is the Mai Mai
Malaika, founded by the deceased She (or Sheikh)
Assani, mostly active in Maniema’s Kabambare
territory. The group strongly opposed the

Roadblock at Kinigi, Masisi territory, 2018

59 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit., §61; Interviews with several CSO representatives, Goma, February 2022); interview with a
representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February 2022; interview with a state agent, Goma, February 2022.
60 Interviews with several CSO representatives, Goma, February 2022; interview with a representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February
2022.
61 Interview with a CSO representative, Goma, February 2022; interview with a representative of an international NGO, Goma, February
2022.
62 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit., §130.
63 IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., p. 28.

19

operations of the mining company Banro in Namoya and Salamabila. In December 2022, IPIS field teams
observed the interference of Malaika at several gold mines in the area of Salamabila. While there have
been reports of fighting between the Mai Mai and the FARDC in the area, the two actors also have some
arrangements on the distribution of income from mining – i.e. dividing the number of days each can
control certain roadblocks leading up to the mine.
A plethora of Raia Mutomboki groups operate across several territories of South Kivu (mainly in
Shabunda, but also in Walungu). They were created as self-defense groups to drive out the FDLR. Once
this goal was achieved, they did not want to disarm and continued to protect their communities against
potential attacks from “foreigners.”64 Raia Mutomboki groups rely on different sources of revenue for
their livelihood: in certain areas they have established systems of tax collection in mining sites (taxation
of production) or at roadblocks (taxation on transport of minerals and commercial goods).65 Isolated cases
of Raia Mutomboki attacking and pillaging mining sites, and abusing miners, have also been reported
in Shabunda.66 The UN Group of Experts 2021 report covered some of their illegal taxation practices on
charcoal in Kalehe territory.67

3.2. FARDC
A crucial issue to tackle both insecurity and conflict financing in eastern DRC, is to deal with the FARDC
performance. Society, and in particular the economy, has seen increasing levels of interference by the
military and its elites. The military has developed several illegal revenue-generating practices, including
roadblock taxation, 68 racketeering and extortion in natural resources sectors, and operating as
private security guards to secure mining operations.
For a decade, IPIS mines mapping work has revealed that FARDC units are the armed actor that can be
observed most often interfering in the mining business, and increasingly so.69 At a sample of 711 mines
visited by IPIS between 2016 and 2018, the main culprit of armed interference were the FARDC. They were
responsible for 66% of the ‘affected’ mining sites (198 out of 265).70
‘Armed interference’ in mining has many shapes: Rank-and-file soldiers can try to make a living by levying
(small or higher) taxes on various mining stakeholder; Army officers involved directly or indirectly in
mining and mineral trade; Mine owners that have to pay for so-called military protection; FARDC
systematically organizing ‘Salongo’, i.e. one day of labor per week; or Semi-industrial gold mining
companies hiring FARDC soldiers as private security guards.71
Resource revenues for military people can explain the inertia with regards to armed groups in eastern
DRC. The continued presence of these armed groups “legitimizes” the army unit’s deployment, which
enables them to develop their economic activities, including interference in mining. Multiple examples
exist of FARDC and nearby armed groups that coexist and have arrangements with regards to the division
of revenues from the local mining business. IPIS research, for example, observed an arrangement between
Mai Mai Malaika and the FARDC around Salamabila (Kabambare territory, Maniema Province). The UN
Group of Experts reported last year about a collaboration between the FARDC and the NDC-R/Bwirafaction to exploit gold at the Matungu mine.72 In Fizi territory, South Kivu, IPIS found that the FARDC and
64 IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., p. 15.
65 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., p. 16; IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., pp. 16-17.
66 IPIS, Transparency and formalization of gold supply chains in Eastern Congo, Antwerp: IPIS, April 2020, pp. 37-38; PRG, IPIS, SFR and
Ulula, Evaluating due diligence programs for conflict minerals: A matched analysis of 3T mines in Eastern Congo, Los Angeles/Antwerp,
November 2020, p. 19.
67 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit., §179.
68 IPIS, Roadblock rebels: IPIS maps important mechanism of conflict funding in Central Africa, December 2017: https://ipisresearch.
be/roadblock-rebels-ipis-maps-important-mechanism-conflict-funding-central-africa/; Schouten P., J. Murairi, and S. Kubuya
(November 2017), op. cit.
69 See IPIS mapping reports since 2013. E.g. IPIS, Analysis of the interactive map of artisanal mining areas in Eastern DR Congo, November
2013.
70 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 15-19.
71 Interviews with several CSO representatives, Bunia, February 2022; see also IPIS, Grievance, governance and gold in the eastern Congo,
IPIS Briefing, December 2021 – January 2022.
72 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit.

20

Yakutumba divided the taxation days between them at three productive sites, to avoid coming face to
face and having to engage in combat.73 In the territory of Djugu, Ituri, IPIS observed CODECO occupying
the gold mining site of Morgue, while at the same time elements of FARDC were manning a permanent
roadblock at the entrance of this mine.74
The FARDC’s role in the consolidation of the illegal exploitation of natural resources, and even financing
insecurity, raises questions on the efficiency of the state of siege that had been declared by president
Tshisekedi’s government in May 2021 to cope with escalating violence in Ituri and North Kivu. Civil society
organizations in Bunia, the capital of Ituri, complain that the state of siege seems to make the security
situation in Ituri worse: the killings and pillages continue, and CODECO and other armed groups are
controlling (economically) important zones (see section 3.1.1.). The state of siege was initially proclaimed
for 30 days but was extended at regular occasions by the national parliament until now; the provincial
government and parliament are suspended, and a military governor and police vice-governor have
been installed in both Ituri and North Kivu.75 The FARDC seems unable (or unwilling) to neutralize the
armed groups, or to negotiate a truce to pacify the provinces. Despite a number of CODECO factions
signing a truce with the government (under the auspices of The United Nations Organization Stabilization
Mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo [MONUSCO]) in early June 2022 attacks continue to be
reported in Djugu.
The state of siege “normalizes” the presence of FARDC in gold mines, as they are supposed to protect
mines and artisanal miners against attacks and pillages by armed groups: this situation offers economic
opportunities to Congolese army officers. The security situation did not improve during the state of
siege. The civil society of North Kivu recently pointed out that during that period about 2,000 civilians
have been killed, and that the armed group M23 has re-emerged.76

Presence of Mining Police in Kampene area, Maniema province

73
74
75
76

IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., p. 16.
IPIS (October 2020), op. cit.
Ordinances N°21/015 and N°21/016 of May 3, 2021.
La Prunelle RDC, “Etat de siège au Nord Kivu: près de 2 000 civils tués en 11 mois (Société Civile)”, 14 April 2022, https://laprunellerdc.
info/etat-de-siege-au-nord-kivu-pres-de-2-000-civils-tues-en-11-mois-societe-civile/. Rwanda-backed M23 was founded in 2012 by
former militiamen of CNDP who were not satisfied with the government’s implementation of the peace agreement of 23 March
2009.

21

For a more effective army in general, analysts have demanded more accountability, and a reform process,
including a “clean-up of the command structures and a replacement of the close-knit networks of the
former regime.”77 Prospects for such genuine reform processes are still rather poor, especially when
considering that some high ranking FARDC officials, known for their implication in human rights violations
and illegal natural resource-profiting continue to hold prominent positions in the army.78

77 Nyenyezi Bisoka A., K. Vlassenroot, and H. Hoebeke, The limits of President Tshisekedi’s security strategy in the Democratic Republic
of Congo, LSE, 28 April 2020, https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/crp/2020/04/28/the-limits-of-president-tshisekedis-security-strategy-in-thedemocratic-republic-of-congo/.
78 Gabriel Amisi, nicknamed ‘Tango Four’, for example has been appointed Inspector General in 2020. General Amisi is known for his
involvement in human rights violations, selling arms to poachers and militias and extracting profit from the gold mining sector: https://
www.globalwitness.org/en/campaigns/democratic-republic-congo/omate/,
https://www.theafricareport.com/34129/drc-underpressure-from-the-us-tshisekedi-reshuffles-army/ , https://www.hrw.org/news/2019/05/15/prosecute-dr-congos-general-amisi .

22

4. RELATED ISSUES TO CONSIDER
Conflict dynamics and conflict financing in eastern DRC are extremely complex and multidimensional.
Although natural resources, and particularly minerals, play an important role, analyzing Congo’s conflicts
only through a natural resource lens entails the risk of reaching simplistic conclusions. Issues about
landownership and access to land contribute substantially to conflict persistence. Artisanal mining is
linked to land issues, and land issues have often deep historical roots, going back to the colonial period
when ethnic identities were constructed and bureaucratically institutionalized. Moreover, long-lasting
governance failure perpetuates or re-dynamizes existing conflicts, or causes new disputes. Failing
disarmament and demobilization programs, elite capture, underperforming corrupt state services, and
faltering mining sector formalization processes, all increase the complexity of eastern Congo’s conflict
landscapes.

4.1. Access to land
Landownership, customary land rights, and access to land in general, are important drivers of conflict in
eastern DRC. According to Vlassenroot (2004) “local-level disputes over land, rather than armed struggle
for control over mining sites, have tended to dominate local socio-economic competition, pitching entire
communities against each other”.79 Access to land often plays an important role in mining disputes.
Demarcation of mining concessions and mining sites, or compensation to the landowner of a mining
site, are for example important sources of local conflict (e.g. between mining cooperatives, between
cooperatives or artisanal miners and industrial concession holders, between miners and farmers). Mining
is intrinsically linked to land.

Mulunguyi gold mine, Nyunzu territory, Tanganyika

79 Vlassenroot K. “Land and conflict: The case of Masisi”. In K. Vlassenroot and T. Raeymaekers (Eds.), Conflict and Social Transformation
in Eastern DR Congo, Ghent: Academia Press Scientific Publishers, 2004, p. 81.

23

Several of the conflicts that we have mentioned before, in which minerals play an important role for
conflict financing, have their historic roots in competition over land. The history of the Lendu-Hema
antagonism in the province of Ituri, for example, goes back to pre-colonial times. CODECO and Zaïre
groups that currently fight each other, and increasingly rely on mining revenues, find their roots in these
tensions. Hema, originally pastoralists, established some political and economic dominance over the
farming community of Lendu. Belgian colonial authorities institutionalized inter-community differences
by creating separate tribal administrative entities (chiefdoms) for Lendu and Hema, allowing them to
rule more efficiently over local communities. Under colonial rule, Hema achieved favorable access to
education and employment in the local administration, and mining and farming business. President
Mobutu’s nationalization policy aggravated tensions: he promulgated a new land law that declared all
land and mineral resources state property, annulling customary land rights and concessions granted
before independence. Due to their political ties with the Mobutu administration, Hema elites acquired
land that was previously owned by Lendu.80 Many Lendu felt discriminated against because of this shift
in landholding (see section 3.1.1).
Besides the historic roots, mining disputes also occur around land demarcation conflicts, or
compensation for land-use. In 2020 IPIS identified a conflict over boundaries in the territory of Kalehe, in
the province of South Kivu, between the cooperatives COMEAHLU and COMEALU about the management
of the coltan mine of Ruziba. Tensions ran so high that there was a potential risk that the cooperatives
might turn into “militia mobilization structures”. A solution was found due to the mediation of the subLocal Monitoring Committee (sous-Comité Local de Suivi) and the Provincial Monitoring Committee
(Comité Provincial de Suivi), two multi-stakeholder structures created to monitor problems in the mining
sector: COMEAHLU received rights to Ruziba, whereas COMEALU received the site of Cyangugu. 81 (More
discussion on the function of these monitoring committees under section 4.5.) Recurrent disputes have
been observed in Kalehe between owners of agropastoral land and mining operators: landowners refuse
to allow mining activities in their concessions unless they receive compensation. 82
The long-lasting conflict between the cooperative COOPERAMMA and the mining company SMB
concerning the coltan-rich mining concession around Rubaya (Masisi territory, North Kivu) is an illustrative
example of how complex a mining conflict can be. As it is interwoven with various other conflict drivers,
including land, it becomes very difficult to untangle. During the second Congo War, Mwangachuchu Hizi
International (now SMB) received a mining concession on land that local Hutu communities consider
as their ancestral land (see also section 4.2). SMB would establish industrial mining activities, but they
never came to fruition. In the meantime, artisanal miners of COOPERAMMA (mainly Hutu) worked on
the SMB concession, causing tensions between SMB and the cooperative. An agreement was signed,
stipulating that COOPERAMMA miners could dig coltan in the SMB concession on the condition that
their production is entirely sold to SMB. However, SMB seems unable to pay the miners on a regular basis,
which has intensified the tensions. SMB has used Mining Police (PMH, Police des Mines et Hydrocarbures)
and FARDC units to chase COOPERAMMA miners. The perception exists that SMB has its own PMH force
(the “SMB police”) to protect its concession. 83 Armed clashes between PMH and armed miners (several
COOPERAMMA miners are ex-members of Nyatura) have been reported; in at least one incident several
miners were killed.84 Until today this conflict remains unsettled (see section 3.1.2).

Fahey D., Ituri. Gold, land, and ethnicity in North-Eastern Congo. Rift Valley Institute/Usalama Project, 2013, pp. 27-28.
IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., p. 27.
IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., p. 27.
Interviews with several CSO representatives, Goma, February 2022; interview with a representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February
2022; interview with a state agent, Goma, February 2022.
84 UN Group of Experts (June 2021), op. cit., §61; interview with a CSO representative, Goma, February 2022; interview with a
representative of Pole Institute, Goma, February 2022; interview with a state agent, Goma, February 2022.

80
81
82
83

24

4.2. Intercommunity tensions
Access to natural resources in eastern Congo is regularly linked to inter-community tensions, with
ethnicity being considered as an important conflict driver. However, ethnicity has been socially
constructed during the colonial period: ethnic identities were institutionalized by colonial rulers who
classified communities by imposing on them tribal categories, linking them to a specific geographic
location. 85 Local entrepreneurs can manipulate ethnic identities to compete for access to resources;
ethnic cleavages are invoked through a political struggle against marginalization and socio-economic
inequality.86 In this context, rival elites employ autochthony discourses, promising political and economic
security for those “born of the soil” against interference of the “others” (the “migrants” or “foreigners”).
Violence in gold-rich Ituri is closely linked to ethnic tensions, which have been instrumentalized by
such local entrepreneurs. During the second Congo War, the Ugandan army occupied parts of Ituri: its
interference in the region aggravated tensions between Lendu and Hema communities which eventually
deteriorated into violent conflict. The Ugandan general James Kazini had created the province of KibaliIturi with a Hema governor, controlling vast mineral-rich areas (gold, but also diamonds) and transborder economic networks. As the new power structure in Ituri was dominated by Hema-elites, nonHema communities felt excluded from political and economic decision-making. 87 Hema and Lendu
elites created their own militia: the Hema-movement Union des Patriotes Congolais (UPC), and two
Lendu-dominated groups, Front des Nationalistes Intégrationnistes (FNI) and FRPI, fought each other in the
territories of Djugu and Irumu.
Violence started flaring up again in Ituri, in December 2017. Since then, local communities have been
devastated by brutal killings, sexual violence, large-scale and systematic destruction of houses, schools
and medical facilities, and massive displacements. Long-lasting antagonisms between Lendu and
Hema communities lie at the root of this resurging violence. The conflict however also entails social
and economic dimensions, with social inequality and competition over access to natural resources
(land and minerals), as the main conflict drivers. The main armed actor in the current conflict is the Lendu
militia CODECO, which claims to protect the Lendu community against Hema and the Congolese army
(according to CODECO an accomplice of the Hema). CODECO and its factions are considered responsible
for most of the atrocities committed in the past three years in several territories of Ituri province.
Remarkably, CODECO experienced continuous changes since its re-emergence: from coalition formation
(with Union des Révolutionnaires pour la Défense du Peuple Congolais or URDPC) to fragmentation with the
split-off of dissident factions. 88
It is always a delicate exercise to analyze the ethnic dimension in conflicts and access to resources.
Verweijen (2020), for example, warns against the narrow ethnic analysis of violence in the highlands
of Fizi-Uvira- Mwenga in South Kivu. Banyamulenge have clearly been involved in violent conflicts with
other communities in the area. These conflicts, however, turn around local authority and control over
land and resources, including markets, mines, and cattle movements. Moreover, she underlines that
“violence is committed first and foremost by armed groups and ‘local defense’ militias”, who claim to
protect these communities’ interests.89
Verweijen and Brabant (2017) also point to the role of local political elites: “Although armed groups are
commonly formed on a mono-ethnic basis and claim to represent the interests of the communities
they issue out of, they clearly also have divergent interests and agendas, related to the ambitions of
their leadership and political supporters”. Armed action is often framed as necessary to protect the
community, but according to Verweijen and Brabant (2017), these framings are manipulated by politicomilitary entrepreneurs, and therefore do not always reflect the views of communities. In other words,
armed militia are often instrumentalized by local elites, applying ethnic and autochthony discourses, to
85 Berman B., “Ethnicity, patronage and the African state: The politics of uncivil nationalism”, African Affairs, 97, 388 (1998), 305-341, p. 321.
86 Vermeersch P., Theories of ethnic mobilization: Overview and recent trends, Leuven: CRPS Working paper No. 3, 2011, pp. 6-7.
87 Vlassenroot K., S. Perrot, and J. Cuvelier, “Doing business out of war: An analysis of the UPDF’s presence in the Democratic Republic
of Congo”, Journal of Eastern African Studies, 6, 1 (2012), 2-21.
88 Agenonga Chober A. and G. Berghezan (2021), op. cit., pp. 10-11.
89 Verweijen J., Why violence in the South Kivu Highlands Is not ‘ethnic’ (And other misconceptions about the crisis), KST, 31 August 2020:
https://blog.kivusecurity.org/why-violence-in-the-south-kivu-highlands-is-not-ethnic-and-other-misconceptions-about-the-crisis/.

25

achieve political and economic goals.90 Even though armed groups regularly prey on local communities’
feelings of discontent to legitimize their activities, and they sometimes even enjoy support from members
of the community, they do not represent the community. A CSO representative in North Kivu warned
against superficial analysis of community problems by international observers. Too often the perception
of communities towards armed groups is not sufficiently analyzed.91
The SMB/COOPERAMMA dispute in Rubaya, North Kivu (see sections 3.1.2 and 4.1), offers an example
of ethnicity being manipulated by political elites. The story of this conflict can also be read as a power
struggle between the Tutsi politician and member of national parliament Edouard Mwangachuchu, who
is the owner of SMB, and the Hutu politician and chairman of the provincial parliament Robert Seninga,
who is the leader of the cooperative COOPERAMMA. Seninga’s power base is the local Hutu community,
and the miners who are members of his cooperative are part of this community. It is easily imaginable
that Seninga mobilizes hundreds of young miners to defend the interests of their community, against the
arbitrariness of “foreign” company directors.

4.3. DDR and stabilization
Although the presence of natural resources, and in particular of minerals, plays an important role in
survival strategies of non-state armed groups in eastern DRC, it does not fully explain why armed groups
remain mobilized or re-mobilize after a period of ostensible peace. Many mining zones in eastern DRC
have a long history of armed mobilization. Some local armed groups might still be present in the area,
either interfering in mining or not. Furthermore, a lot of miners are former combatants. The risk of a
re-mobilization of these former combatants, or increasing armed group activity, is latently present faced
with numerous conflicts over land or access to minerals.92
In February 2022, for example, IPIS mapped mines in Moba territory (Tanganyika). The situation was
relatively calm at the time of the visit. Nevertheless, many of the miners are former members of the
Mai Mai Éléments. In 2019, there have been some symbolic activities to lay down arms, but a wider
disarmament has never happened. At the site of Kakuma, a SAEMAPE agent explained how risky such a
situation can be. He had been threatened to death by some former militia members over taxation efforts
and accusations of witchcraft that allegedly caused gold production to decrease.
In the past decades, the Congolese government has made several unsuccessful attempts to set up socalled DDR programs to dismantle non-state armed groups and to facilitate the return of former rebels
to civilian life. Vogel and Musamba (2015) discern several reasons why these DDR programs have failed: 1)
due to security dilemmas (opponents do not disarm; persistent local insecurity due to absence of army
or police), militia refuse to disarm or re-mobilize, claiming to protect their communities against threats;
2) political elites may invest capital to mobilize ex-combatants to achieve political goals; 3) militia
commanders refuse to join DDR programs that lack an incentives system (integration in the regular army,
receipt of military ranks); 4) DDR programs do not support the efforts of combatants to redefine their
social roles in civilian life; 5) ex-combatants fear relocation.93 More in general, lack of financial means,
substantial program delays, and exorbitant demands made by some commanders, have contributed to
the failure of DDR. The fate of FRPI, an armed group in the province of Ituri, is a striking example of the
failing DDR approach. In 2020 FRPI signed a peace agreement with the Congolese government. According
to Bouvy et al. (2021) the process of disarmament and demobilization stalled because of “a lack of will
by both parties to advance on key steps of the process”.94 Finally, FRPI members returned to the bush
and continue controlling zones in the territory of Irumu, where they access mines, erect roadblocks, and

90 Verweijen J. and J. Brabant, “Cows and guns. cattle-related conflict and armed violence in Fizi and Itombwe, eastern DR Congo”, The
Journal of Modern African Studies, 55, 1 (2017), 1-27, p. 23.
91 Interview with a CSO representative, Goma, February 2022.
92 Wakenge C.I. (October 2020), op. cit., p. 71.
93 Vogel C. and J. Musamba, Recycling rebels? Demobilization in the Congo. Rift Valley Institute, PSRP Briefing Paper 11, March 2016, pp.
3-4.
94 Bouvy A., I. Finnbbakk, J.-M. Mazio, E. Mongo, and F. Van Lierde, The FRPI peace process at an Impasse. Lessons from a communitybased and political approach to DDR in the Congo, Governance in Conflict Network: Insecurity Livelihoods Series, May 2021, p. 28.

26

confiscate harvests.95 Governmental initiatives to disarm, demobilize and reintegrate CODECO militiamen
also largely failed up to now.96
In July 2021, President Félix Tshisekedi announced the creation of another demobilization program,
Programme de Désarmement, Démobilisation, Relèvement Communautaire et Stabilisation
(P-DDRCS), which results from a merger of existing programs. Officially this program aims not only to
resolve conflicts and stabilize eastern DRC, but also to support local development, economic recovery,
and social cohesion. However, according to the late Eric Mongo, a prominent CSO representative, this
new program lacks a solid strategy.97 Moreover, the coordinator of the P-DDRCS, Tommy Tambwe Ushindi
(who is an ex-member of RCD-Goma), is heavily contested in the provinces of South and North Kivu.
According to Kivu Security Tracker, the chances of success of P-DDRCS are low, due to disagreements
with the funders and the fact that the program has not much to offer to demobilizing militiamen.98
P-DDRCS is yet another attempt of president Tshisekedi to solve the “eastern Congo problem”, after
several DDR failures and rather unsuccessful peace talks, undertaken by so-called peace task forces
led by former warlords (such as Germain Katanga and Thomas Lubanga).99 Additionally, the Congolese
government started peace talks (the Nairobi Process) with several armed groups on April 22, 2022, in
Nairobi, Kenya, under the auspices of the East African Community (EAC).100

4.4. Governance and corruption
A full understanding of armed actors’ interference in mining should be considered in the wider context
of mining governance, and in particular corruption, in eastern DRC. The functioning of Congolese state
institutions is seriously challenged by clientelism and kleptocracy, leading to issues such as corruption
and embezzlement, and a lack of neutrality in managing conflict.101
State officials often play a crucial role in the persistence of illegal trade, and their illegal interference in
ASM is omnipresent. Non-armed interference is part of power dynamics in which the artisanal miners
are often the weakest side.102 These practices sustain a climate of predation,103 undermine the state, and
enable smuggling and “conflict financing” to persist.
Mining actors often perceive state agents solely as tax collectors. They do not feel they get anything in
return, such as technical support, or peaceful resolution of mining conflicts.104 As mining stakeholders
alienate from the state, they look for alternative (non-official) ways to resolve disputes and to protect
their claims. People turn to the military or police to settle their argument with conflicting parties in a
non-official way, or even to shelter them from state oversight. At the gold mine Mission Moto2 in Watsa
territory (Haut-Uélé province), for example, police officers guarded the entrance of the site preventing
other state services to monitor the exploitation of a Chinese company. In some instances, people even
turn to armed groups to protect them against taxation - or predation - by state agents. State officials, on
the other hand, can also turn to the military to enforce taxation of miners. In early 2022, IPIS researchers
reported complaints by mineral traders in the Penekusu area (Shabunda territory, South Kivu). They claim
the local head of the mining division is collaborating with military from the neighboring province of
Maniema (based in Bikenge), to extort traders.

95 Interview with the late Eric Mongo, Bunia, February 2022. Eric Mongo was coordinator of the civil society organization Appui à la
Communication Interculturelle et à l’Auto-Promotion Rurale (ACIAR); he was involved in the peace negotiations with FRPI.
96 Vircoulon T., Ituri: Résurgence du conflit et échec de la politique de consolidation de la paix, IFRI, June 2021, pp. 18-19.
97 Interview with Eric Mongo, Bunia, February 2022.
98 Kivu Security Tracker, In Ituri Province the FARDC are unable to distinguish CODECO militias from civilians, 15 November 2021.
99 Radio Okapi, 8 membres de la task Force pris en otage par les miliciens de CODECO, 17 February 2022.
100 Radio Okapi, Début du dialogue direct entre le gouvernement et les groupes armés locaux à Nairobi, 22 April 2022.
101 Sungura A., N. Ndeze, M. Mbamba, H. Rugambwa, and L. Kitonga, Politics of the past and the present: The changes and continuities of
conflict in eastern Congo’s Petit Nord-Kivu, Insecure Livelihoods Series, CRG, GEC-SH, GIC, May 2021, p. 57.
102 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 24-25.
103 Wakenge C.I. (October 2020), op. cit.
104 Many state agents are hardly trained and have little knowledge of the sector. As they often do not receive a salary, they need to turn
to miners to make a living.

27

(Foreign) businesses interested in access to mineral deposits in eastern DRC, and in particular gold, face
neo-patrimonial systems in the country. Seeking “protection” through the support from strongmen,
from the local up to the provincial level, seems crucial to be able to operate. There is however a serious
risk that this ‘protection’ results in practices and exploitations which are not monitored by legal state
institutes. The most recent turmoil over the Chinese semi-industrial exploitations in South Kivu offers a
good example. The local customary chief of the chefferie Wamuzimu signed a partnership agreement
with some of these Chinese companies. The South Kivu Governor Théo Kasi and the Commander of the
3rd military region, General Bob Kilubia, have been accused of ‘protecting’ these exploitations. As such,
mining state agents were no longer able to monitor the situation.105 (A more detailed presentation on the
issues around these illegal semi-industrial exploitations under section 4.7)
Since 2010, artisanal miners in DRC are obliged
to group themselves in mining cooperatives.106
Ever since, such cooperatives have mushroomed
all over the eastern part of the country.
Unfortunately, instead of promoting collective
action among artisanal miners to further their
interests, in practice, cooperatives have become
vehicles to exploit the miners. Cooperatives are
subject to elite capture, they establish trade
monopolies, are organized along ethnic lines,
and they do not provide any support to miners.
This rather increases socio-economic inequality
and frustrations, and could potentially increase
community tensions over access to resources.107 In
February 2022, two people got killed following a
dispute between members of two different clans
in the groupement Bamuguba Sud (South Kivu
province), notably the Lwito and Milambwe. The
two clans competed for the management of the
cooperative that oversaw the cassiterite mining
site of Ndilo. Local authorities seem to have made
an uncareful assessment when deciding to create
a cooperative to exploit the Ndilo mine, and to
assign its management to the Milambwe clan. Two
members from the Lwito clan were shot when the
police wanted to disperse a protest held against
this decision.108

Crushed minerals, Mawamba gold mining site,
Mambasa territory, Ituri

Moreover, competing claims between cooperatives are for the moment one of the main sources of conflict
in the sector (see for example section 4.1). A recent IPIS report flagged such conflicts at almost all places
it monitored in South Kivu: in North Bamuguba (Shabunda), Numbi (Kalehe), and Misisi (Fizi).109 These
conflicts are regularly (partly) instigated by failing mining governance, as mining authorities tolerate
several cooperatives to work on the same artisanal mining permit (ZEA, Zone d’Exploitation Artisanale).
Finally, the very same state institutions that are struggling with clientelism and corruption, are key partners
for the implementation of international donor-funded programmes, including DDR, stabilization, and
responsible sourcing.110 Their malfunctioning weakens and undermines these initiatives. IPIS reported
105 Mwetaminwa J. and T. Vircoulon, Un scandale sino-congolais. L’exploitation illégale des minerais et des forêts par les entreprises chinoises
au Sud-Kivu, IFRI, February 2022.
106 Arrête ministériel n° 0706/CAB.MIN/MINES/01/2010 du 20 septembre 2010 portant mesures urgentes d’encadrement de la décision
de suspension des activités minières dans les provinces du Maniema, Nord-Kivu et Sud-Kivu.
107 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 33-34.
108 Congoleo, 2 Morts dans la lutte entre deux clans sur La gestion du site minier Ndilo, 5 February 2022 https://congoleo.net/shabunda-2morts-dans-la-lutte-entre-deux-clans-sur-la-gestion-du-site-minier-ndilo/
109 IPIS (April 2021), op. cit., pp. 22, 27, 30.
110 Sungura A. et al. (May 2021), op. cit., p. 57.

28

how state agents structurally undermine traceability by tagging minerals at large distances from the
mine, and by selling these tags to mineral traders.111 Mineral traders explained to IPIS that they do believe
that responsible sourcing initiatives could potentially have a positive impact, but these same initiatives
increase the strength of state agents to exploit mineral traders, as well as other mining stakeholders.
They recommend that more accompanying efforts should be implemented to ensure that these agents
implement responsible sourcing correctly.112

4.5. Mining reform and formalization
Since the end of the Congo Wars, the DRC mining sector has undergone several structural reforms,
including a new mining code (2002), and a revision of the latter in 2018. Additionally, an increasing
number of governmental, international and private initiatives have been launched since 2008 to formalize
the country’s artisanal mining sector, and to promote more responsible sourcing practices.113 Most of
these initiatives focus on breaking the link between conflict and mineral extraction, such as the DRC
government’s ban on ASM in 2010-2011, the Dodd-Frank Act Section 1502, the EU ‘Conflict Minerals’
regulation and private due diligence programs.
Several reports have already been published over
the past decade that assess the impact of these
responsible sourcing initiatives.114 In brief,
recent studies confirm that responsible sourcing
initiatives seem to discourage armed interference
in the artisanal mining sector. It should be added
that private traceability programs are initiated
in mines that were previously validated by the
government and are considered free of armed
interference. A wide range of challenges persist
however, and further progress seems to be very
limited over the past few years.
Physical and social access to resources is an
important element in several conflicts in eastern
DRC, see section 4.1, 4.2 and 4.3 above. Mining
reform in eastern DRC during the past fifteen
years, including regulation and responsible
sourcing initiatives, have created additional
barriers to access resources for most stakeholders.
These barriers risk to nurture socio-economic
inequality.
Although mining reform and responsible sourcing
Transport and storage of gravel, Mabangala mining
have increased the level of organization of ASM,
site, Mambasa territory, Ituri.
it seems to have been particularly instrumental to
local elites. Take the example of cooperatives (see
previous section), which have become vehicles used by local elites to acquire access to mineral resources.
Subsequently, it has further weakened ordinary artisanal miners’ position. In 2018, interviewees, including
diggers and local community members, stated that cooperatives and the elites that preside them, are the
main beneficiaries of responsible sourcing.115
111 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 50-51.
112 Interview with two mineral traders, Bukavu, February 2022.
113 IPIS, The formalisation of artisanal mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, commissioned by the Center for
International Forestry Research (CIFOR), 2012.
114 PRG, IPIS, SFR and Ulula (November 2020), op. cit. ; Musamba J. and C. Vogel, The problem with “conflict minerals”, 21 October 2021,
https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/the-problem-with-conflict-minerals ; IPIS (April 2019), op. cit.; Wakenge C.I. et al.
(March 2021), op. cit.; IPIS, ‘Conflict Minerals’ initiatives in DR Congo: Perceptions of local mining communities, November 2013.
115 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 33-34.

29

Long-term peaceful solutions require inclusive approaches, while responsible sourcing initiatives
have often used strategies of exclusion. Several observers and initiatives have considered to cut out
“illicit” local traders of mineral supply chains, as they extort miners and channel gold into illicit trading
networks.116 These types of analyses seem to suffer from a lack of contextualization. Local traders are
indeed one of the key actors maintaining illicit trade, but they actually have rational reasons for this.
Vogel and Musamba (2017) describe local mineral traders as “brokers of socio-economic life in North and
South Kivu”. On the one hand, they are acquainted with comptoirs, credit institutions, local politicians,
kinship networks and security forces,117 while on the other they manage to access isolated mines to
buy minerals and provide consumer goods in a context of poverty, insecurity, corruption, and lack of
governance. Rather than cutting them out, initiatives should consider including them. Cutting out such
vested economic interests from the mineral supply chains – with potential ties to people in other sectors
of society, increases the likelihood for additional conflicts.
A crucial shortcoming of the current mining reform in eastern DRC, is the fact that it has largely been
driven by the international consternation over ‘conflict minerals’. Musamba and Vogel (2021), recently,
published a very critical piece, on the legacy of activist campaigns on conflict minerals. They explained
how these campaigns “reproduced colonial ideas of endemic brutality and the need for rescue”. As
responsible sourcing efforts have turned “a blind eye to local complexities”, “violence continues unabated
in eastern Congo”.118
The narrow focus on conflict minerals indeed seems to have resulted in a neglect of the development
potential of ASM. Responsible sourcing efforts, and mining reform more in general, have had no real impact
on local development. Miners claim it has not brought them any additional revenues, and it has been
particularly instrumental to (local) elites. It raises the question on the sustainability of the current situation.119
One could even question to what extent the principle of ’Do No Harm’ has been considered while
implementing responsible sourcing in eastern DRC. Wakenge (2020) states that mining reform has
created new types of conflict, or revived conflicts in some cases, which he defines as “reform conflicts”.120
Most stakeholders agree that responsible sourcing efforts have achieved considerable progress, and
that the security situation in 3T mining has improved. But more isolated zones, and gold mining remain
problematic. Furthermore, several issues undermine further progress of responsible sourcing, including
armed actor strategies, fraud and a profound evaluation.
Armed actors have adapted their strategies to circumvent increasing levels of scrutiny, for example
taxation of mine managers at a distance from the mining site, or exerting a monopoly on consumer
goods in and around the mine. There have even been examples of armed groups that re-invest profits,
illegally realized in agriculture, in the mineral trade: they become traders in the mineral business in urban
trading centers (centres de négoce).
Fraud and smuggling are still omnipresent in mineral trade, even in the so-called responsible supply
chains. As such, responsible sourcing initiatives risk whitewashing minerals coming from illegitimate
mining areas, including protected areas and mines affected by armed actors. One CSO representative
stated that “If the traceability systems where really ‘morale’ they would work together to combat fraud,
and not tagging minerals from each other‘s concessions.” Many responsible sourcing systems in
place have been around for many years. CSO actors claim that since 2010, no proper and transparent
evaluation of these systems has been organized. A profound evaluation of the work and results of these
systems, co-managed by different DRC stakeholders, is therefore direly needed. CSOs at times even raise
questions of conflict of interest by some of these systems and actors involved, as do many people who
profit from it. It appears that responsible sourcing has become less rigorous as the stakes for trade and
the implementation of ‘responsible sourcing’ are high.
116 See for example Lezhnev S., Conflict gold to responsible gold: A roadmap for companies & governments, The Sentry, February 2021, p. 12.
117 Vogel C. and J. Musamba, “Brokers of crisis: the everyday uncertainty of Eastern Congo’s mineral négociants”, Journal of Modern
African Studies, 55, 4 (2017), 567-592.
118 Musamba J. and Vogel C. (21 October 2021), op. cit.
119 IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 11 and 55.
120 Wakenge C.I. (October 2020), op. cit., p. 3.

30

An interesting structure to monitor the mining sector, including the impact of mining reform, is the string
of multi-stakeholder surveillance committees from the provincial to local level. At the provincial level
there are Comité Provincial de Suivi (CPS) in the Kivu provinces and Ituri. Underneath the provincial levels,
there are a range of Comité Territorial de Suivi (CTS) et Comité Local de Suivi (CLS).
There are several anecdotal examples of security improvements following interference by CLS members.
For several years, the CPS South Kivu was also quite active, and made some investments to promote local
development, through available funds of the Basket Found (a fund fed by a levy on mineral exports). In
general, however, the CPS-CLS functioning is hampered by a range of problems. Several interviewees
testified that the structure is too politicized, notably managed by politicians. For example, in South Kivu
the CPS was inactive in 2021 as the Ministry of Mines did not call for a new meeting, and discussions on the
use of the funds in the Basket Found blocked further activities. As the structure is too politicized, several
CSO’s and mining cooperatives also reported that they feel a strong resistance to express themselves
frankly in the meetings. Similarly, local CLS structures are completely controlled by the local chief or
administrator. CPS meetings in Ituri have been suspended since the promulgation of the state of siege.121
CLS structures typically lack finances which undermine a strong and active participation of its members.
For those that do manage to organize regular meetings, interviewees reported that it had become merely
routine structures that lack a strong dynamic to fight fraud and insecurity. Finally, the communication
between the local and the provincial structures is minimal.

4.6. Supply chain actors local to regional
Interference by foreign armed groups, or armed groups supported by DRC’s neighboring countries
decreased steadily over the past fifteen years. While ‘conflict minerals’ was originally a Central African
regional issue, nowadays, an internal DRC strategy to tackle ‘minerals financing insecurity’ has become
more important. Nevertheless, the mineral supply chain - from the mines, through border towns and
regional trading hubs, to the international market - is an obviously important factor when analyzing the
role of mining in the persistence of insecurity. It provides access to the world market, in exchange for cash
money (or in some cases consumer goods). Trade in eastern DRC is traditionally linked to East Africa, so is
its mineral trade. Several important trade corridors exist in eastern DRC that direct gold and 3T minerals
via Uganda, Rwanda, Burundi, Tanzania and Kenya to the world market.
For decades, however, it has been an enormous challenge to channel these minerals in legal supply
chains. Both within DRC, as across the border, a wide range of stakeholders, including formal institutions,
are involved in cross-border smuggling to Burundi, Rwanda and Uganda. Especially for gold, smuggling
occurs everywhere. From the neighboring countries, gold lots end up in the United Arab Emirates
(UAE), often via commercial flights. Sofala Partners and Better Chain concluded that illicit gold trade
is not just a shadow economy, but rather a tacitly mainstream and well- organized system.122 The
omnipresence of gold smuggling seriously undermines traceability, legal trade, responsible sourcing
and the accompanying initiatives that wish to tackle conflict financing. The organization IMPACT has
been implementing the Just Gold project for several years in the DRC. It however concluded that legal
production and trade were not commercially viable under the current market conditions in eastern DRC,
as the project could not compete with gold prices from the informal market.123
The German Federal Institute of Geosciences and Natural Resources (BGR) has been working on ASM in
DRC since more than a decade and drafted a report in 2019 with lessons learned from its pilot project
on gold traceability in Maniema province. It concluded that tax rates in the DRC at the local, provincial
and national level do not incentivize the declaration of gold exports. It is economically more attractive to
smuggle gold across the border. Additionally, tax incentives granted to refineries in neighboring countries
increase the incentive to smuggle. 124 Besides taxation, mineral traders also claimed that they get better
121
122
123
124

Interviews with representatives of local CSOs, Bunia, February 2022.
Sofala Partners and BetterChain (April 2019), op. cit.
UN Group of Experts, Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 2 June 2020, S/2020/482, § 66.
Neumann M. et al., Traceability in Artisanal Gold Supply Chains in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Lessons Learned from the
Kampene Gold Pilot Project, BGR, March 2019, pp. 6-8.

31

prices in neighboring countries because buyers are more trustworthy. They feel as if DRC-based buyers
tend to minimize the mineral grade, and as such push down prices.125
Uganda has been the main exporter of DRC-smuggled gold over the past decade. The Sentry reported
how the value of its official gold exports rose from 443,000 USD in 2014, to 1.2 billion USD in 2019. An
export volume of 27.8 tons in 2019, compared to an estimated maximum production capacity of three
tons per year, reveals the magnitude of gold smuggling.126
Rwanda is historically the main point of export for Congolese 3T minerals. Since 2017, however, the
country has also become an increasingly important destination for smuggled gold from DRC. The
Sentry noted that the UAE alone imported $472 million in gold from Rwanda, while its estimated annual
production capacity is merely 20 to 30 kg.127
Finally, Burundi is another traditional important exporter of Congolese gold. Over the past years,
however, it seems to have declined somewhat.
Within the framework of the International Conference on the Great Lakes Region (ICGLR), the DRC and
its neighboring countries recognize the risk of conflict financing that goes along with illegal exploitation
and trade of natural resources. For this reason, the ICGLR member states created the Regional Initiative
against the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources (RINR). Through six different tools, the latter aims to
break the link between armed conflict and natural resources exploitation in Central Africa.
Some positive impacts with regard to formalization and transparency can be observed in eastern DRC.
(See section 4.5). DRC-based CSOs however complain that other countries in the region are lagging
behind, and as such undermine efforts in the DRC. The UN Group of Experts noted in its 2020 final
report that, so far, the DRC was the only member of the ICGLR that was using ICGLR certificates for 3TG.128
Furthermore, the UN Group of Experts reports on a yearly basis on continuous smuggling of minerals via
Rwanda and Uganda.
Uganda and Rwanda have been in competition over the past years, to be the main gateway for
Congolese gold to the world market. Uganda has been the major road for Congolese gold. A key player
in this is reportedly the Belgian trader Alain Goetz’s African Gold Refinery (AGR). The company had been
established in 2014 and was reportedly sourcing 100-150 kg of gold per week from eastern DRC alone by
2017.129 This quick advance has been facilitated by the 0% export tax that Ugandan president Museveni has
granted that same year.130 The company’s establishment in Entebbe, Uganda, coincided with increasing
gold exports from Uganda. Since 2017, however, Rwanda also steadily increased its gold export volumes,
and since 2019 the country has its own major gold refiner, notably Aldango Ltd. Interestingly, Alain Goetz
is also involved in the latter company.131 Last year, however, Rwandan authorities accused the company
of tax evasion. Next, in June 2021, Rwanda and DRC signed a collaboration agreement for the Congolese
state miner SAKIMA – which holds numerous mining concessions in the Kivu provinces – and the Rwandan
refiner Dither. Uganda was allegedly quite anxious, as it wants to protect its position as the main exporter
of Congolese gold.132
The above competition and the impact on conflict financing needs to be contextualized. The competition
over Congolese gold export routes is part of larger regional geo-politics and (economic) regional
integration. Eastern DRC is an important marketplace for its neighbors beyond mining, including for
agricultural products, consumer goods and services. The DRC is Uganda’s fourth largest trading partner,
and Uganda committed to build more than 200km of roads in DRC. Additionally, Uganda desires a more
stable situation in eastern DRC, in light of the oil exploitation at Lake Albert.133
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133

Interview with two mineral traders, Bukavu, February 2022.
Lezhnev S. (February 2021), op. cit., p. 5.
Lezhnev S. (February 2021), op. cit. p. 6.
UN Group of Experts (2 June 2020), op. cit., p. 3.
Martin A., A Golden Web, IMPACT, November 2019.
Africa Confidential, The Great Lakes gold rush, 23 March 2018.
UN Group of Experts (2 June 2020), op. cit., § 90.
Africa Mining Intelligence, DRC gold at heart of Museveni and Kagame’s new showdown, 23 August 2021.
Africa Mining Intelligence, Museveni deploys yet more troops to protect Total’s oil, 24 May 2021.

32

Against the background of economic interests, it is also interesting to see that President Tshisekedi
reached out to his eastern neighbors for increasing military cooperation. DRC’s military collaboration
with Rwanda (Rwandan Defense Force, RDF) created mistrust within eastern DRC, and several armed
groups reportedly repositioned themselves. While some successes did result from these collaborations,
they certainly also hold a serious risk for re-escalation of insecurity.134 The same goes for the presence
of the Ugandan army in eastern DRC: Ugandan troops are chasing ADF in Ituri, but the question arises
how long local armed groups such as FRPI will tolerate the presence of a foreign military force in their
province.135
Finally, it is important to analyze the mineral supply chain in an integrated way. Mineral supply chains
are characterized by a string of stakeholders with economic interests, not just at the downstream end –
beyond DRC – but from the local up to the territorial, provincial, and national level. Consequently,
conflicts over mining tend to involve a range of actors. Wakenge (2021) defines it as follows: “Les sites
miniers ne sont pas des « enclaves minières » isolées mais des « espaces glocalisés »”136
Local conflicts and conflicting parties should not be considered as mere victims of the international
mineral supply chains. Local strongmen, mining stakeholders, businessmen, and armed groups have
room of maneuver within mineral supply chains and between different sectors. Furthermore, they also
have control over these supply chains and can turn them to their advantage. These observations lead to
two important results. First, merely ‘cleaning up’ supply chains does not provide any solution to these
conflicts. Secondly, local stakeholders should be an integral part in the development of responsible
sourcing efforts. Failing to truly engage these actors will lead to failure of responsible sourcing. Wakenge
et al. (2018) wrote an interesting article illustrating how miners and mineral traders resisted the iTSCi
traceability system in Tanganyika - and the exclusive buying rights from its partner company MMR.137

4.7. Companies and investors rush on gold and minerals
Since the end of the Congo wars, an increasing number of (foreign) enterprises have ventured into
the risky investment environment of eastern DRC looking for mineral resources. Investors face difficult
circumstances and a multitude of stakeholders - including armed actors - before they can exploit minerals.
Such exploitations are often a source of tension that can result in additional insecurity and violence.
These tensions revolve around access to resources, non-respect of informal modalities to acquire access
to land and resources, local communities’ perception of non-respect of local development priorities, etc.
In 2021, a range of Chinese semi-industrial mining companies were heavily criticized for their practices
and behavior in the provinces of South Kivu and Ituri. While foreign companies are not allowed to work
in ASM, they used small Congolese mining cooperatives as front companies to get access to these
permits. Additionally, there have been complaints on the environmental impact of their activities, the
lack of necessary paperwork of their Chinese workers, the lack of overview by the relevant Congolese
mining state services, disregard of local communities and their grievances, as well as the way they used
Congolese security forces as security guards.
Criticism of these semi-industrial initiatives has increased over the past years. The UN Group of Experts
reports since several years on the issue. Local communities’ frustrations have been growing steadily and
several manifestations have been organized against these practices. The documentary maker Alain Foka
reported last year about human rights abuses, corruption, and environmental damages. Several CSO
organizations flagged the issue, and the National Parliament sent a parliamentary commission to South
Kivu to investigate the issue.

134 Nyenyezi Bisoka A., K. Vlassenroot K., and H. Hoebeke (28 April 2020), op. cit.
135 Radio Okapi, Ituri: l’armée ougandaise se déploie officiellement à Boga, 10 February 2022; Interview with Eric Mongo, Bunia, 17 February
2022
136 Wakenge C.I. (April 2021), op. cit.
137 Wakenge C.I., D. Dijkzeul, and K. Vlassenroot, “Regulating the old game of smuggling? Coltan mining, trade and reforms in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo”, Journal of Modern African Studies, 56, 3 (2018), 497-522.

33

Most worrying is how it culminated into violence and targeted attacks. In November 2021, for example,
CODECO rebels attacked a mining camp in Djugu, Ituri province, killing two Chinese nationals and
abducting several others. A few days earlier, armed men kidnapped five Chinese miners and shot a police
officer, in Mukera village (Fizi territory, South Kivu).138
These incidents between armed groups and
Chinese semi-industrial miners should not be
considered as a one-time incident, nor as
a simple opportunistic rent-seeking act of
banditry.
These exploitations, as well as the interference
of armed groups date back to almost a decade
in eastern DRC. In 2015, Life & Peace Institute
(LPI) and IPIS reported about the confiscation of
some dredges of the company River Resources
by Mando’s Simba rebels on the Osso river, at the
border between Maniema and North Kivu.139 And
in 2015 and 2016, a civil society coalition (COSOCGL, Coalition des organisations de la Société Civile
de la région des Grands – Lacs contre l’exploitation
illicite des ressources naturelles) and Global Witness,
created commotion in South Kivu as they exposed
the links between Raïa Mutomboki rebels and a
dredging company in South Kivu, as well as the
involvement of several officials and strongmen.140
The problem however seems to have become
more extensive over the past three years. All
these cases include several of the issues that we
Gold dredging at Lowa river, Maniema, 2022
have discussed above, including protection by
local strongmen and politicians, lack of clarity on
permits (governance), corruption, and the army as private security contractor.141
Besides these Chinese semi-industrial companies, many more mining companies have faced violent and
armed resistance over the past years. Leda Mining holds exploration and exploitation permits in Fizi
territory, South Kivu. Several strongmen with economic interests in artisanal gold exploitation reportedly
stir up popular protests against the company. Additionally, since 2017 Mai Mai Yakutumba and former
FARDC General Sikatenda also stood up against Leda Mining.142 In Maniema’s Kabambare territory, Mai
Mai Malaika strongly resists Banro’s operations in Namoya and Salamabila.
Companies often tend to consistently refer to artisanal miners that are working on their concessions
as “illegal miners”. Such language use has a polarizing effect and contributes to local conflict over
minerals. In the Kivus’ post-war context, this is a very risky strategy that could easily turn into violence
and increasing levels of insecurity. It is not just mining companies that should be careful with the use of
language in the context of eastern DRC where access to resources is a sensitive issue. Other actors and
initiatives have run into the same issues, including for example conservation initiatives and potentially
responsible sourcing efforts.

138 IPIS (1 February 2022), op. cit.
139 Matthysen K. et Wangachumo R., Des brouillards et de la fumée sur Osso: Prototype d’un système opaque de l’exploitation semiindustrielle de l’or à Walikale, PAX, LPI and IPIS, 2015.
140 Global Witness, River of gold: Voices from Shabunda, December 2016; COSOC-GL, La ruée vers l’or à Shabunda: Pratiques et impacts de
l’exploitation minière par dragues, August 2015.
141 See for example: Le Monde, En RDC, des entreprises chinoises accusées de piller l’or du Sud-Kivu, 23 September 2021, https://www.
lemonde.fr/afrique/article/2021/09/23/en-rdc-des-entreprises-chinoises-accusees-de-piller-l-or-du-sud-kivu_6095784_3212.html
142 Wakenge C.I. (October 2020), op. cit.

34

Verweijen (2017) explains how “Armed groups and local strongmen capitalise on widespread anger”
towards mining companies.143 Consequently, the attacks against these companies are not just banditism,
but are rooted in the deeper socio-economic situation, and at times are even politically inspired. Verweijen
(2017) for example discusses the challenges Banro faced in the Namoya region, which experienced an
economic crisis due the forced closure of artisanal mining sites to prepare the ground for industrial
exploitation. Local interest groups can use language of anti-colonialism, which works well with some
marginalized communities in remote areas.
Naturally, many people condemn violence by the armed groups, and understand that it contributes to
the wider level of insecurity. Nevertheless, it is interesting to see how some people still sympathize with
such groups’ acts of violence against these companies. Namoya’s population, for example, was divided
by the Mai Mai’s attacks on Banro, as many still sympathized with the armed group.144 IPIS staff witnessed
an interesting discussing between several CSO representatives over the legitimacy of the kidnapping of
Chinese mining laborers by the CODECO militia, late 2021.
All over the Kivu provinces as well as Maniema, the state-owned company Société Aurifère du Kivu et du
Maniema (SAKIMA) holds an important number of large mining concessions, which also creates tensions
with the mining companies Leda Mining and Banro, as well as local mining stakeholders.
Besides its conflict with the cooperative COOPERAMMA (see section 3.1.2), the mining company SMB
has a dispute with its neighbor SAKIMA. Both conflicts are connected. SAKIMA has a mining concession
that is located next to the SMB concession. Reportedly, COOPERAMMA miners illegally transport coltan
produced in the SMB mines to sites in the SAKIMA concession, where they get a better price for the
minerals, and where SMB-coltan enters the so-called clean coltan supply chain of SAKIMA (which is
covered by the iTSCi program).145
Near Lulingu, in the groupement Bamuguba Nord (South Kivu), SAKIMA holds the exploitation permits
26, 27, and 2596. The company is however unable to start industrial exploitation and allows artisanal
exploitation in its concession via the cooperative COOMIMBE. In exchange, SAKIMA demands a levy of
0,10 USD/kg, which is unjustified according to miners and COOMIMBE members, as they get nothing in
return from SAKIMA. Additionally, since 2018, SAKIMA discussed a purchase monopoly for the Bukavubased businessman Muyeye Lwaboshi. People complained that it has a negative effect on the buying
price for 3T minerals in the area. The latter issue has also been observed in several other areas, e.g. AMUR
in Kalehe territory. The imposition of such monopolies carries certain risks. The perception of being
excluded from the price setting process often creates discontent among miners. This discontent can lead
to social tensions and increasing levels of contraband trade.146
To close this section, it is interesting to quote a recommendation of Verweijen (2017): “Industrial mining
companies operating in the eastern DRC would do well to acknowledge how their presence feeds into
dynamics of conflict and violence”.147

143
144
145
146
147

Verweijen J., Shedding light on why mining companies in eastern Congo are under attack, The Conversation, 30 august 2017.
Verweijen J. (30 august 2017), op. cit.
Interview with CSO representative, Goma, February 2022.
IPIS (April 2019), op. cit., pp. 41-43.
Verweijen J. (30 august 2017), op. cit.

35

5. CONCLUSIONS
Large-scale armed conflict over DRC’s mineral wealth has decreased significantly over the past twenty
years. Nevertheless, mining and mineral trade still play an important role in ongoing armed and unarmed
conflicts in eastern DRC. We have identified largely three direct ways that link mining and conflict, and
even insecurity more in general. First, at the local level, conflicts over access to resources are still common.
Second, over the past two decades, self-defense groups (including Mai Mai, Nyatura and Raïa Mutomboki
groups) have mushroomed ‘to protect local communities’ against external threats (including FDLR and
foreign business interests). These armed groups now use mineral resources, among other sources of
income, to survive. Many of them grew out of their ideological strife, and rent-seeking incentives have
become more prominent. Third, FARDC (national army) units are the most prominent armed actors
interfering in the mining business.
While most DRC actors do recognize that considerable progress has been made over the past ten years
in 3T supply chains, only very limited progress has been observed in gold (which makes up about 80% of
the eastern DRC’s ASM sector). Despite progress in 3T, there is dissatisfaction among most stakeholders
on mining reform, and on the implementation of responsible sourcing efforts in particular (traceability,
CLS, etc.). This dissatisfaction however hardly seems to be heard. Mining reform and formalization are
tools which can contribute to make mineral supply chains clean(er), but they do not tackle the root
causes of most of the ongoing armed and non-armed conflicts in eastern DRC: they rather belong to
the realm of symptom treatment. Fundamental causes of conflict should be dealt with by taking a
holistic approach, taking into account all factors/drivers that potentially contribute to the conflict (e.g.
economic competition for natural resources, social inequality, unfair economic practices, land issues,
bad performance of technical state services, failing national administration) and acknowledging that
several of these factors are interconnected (mining reform and formalization is linked to state service
performance, state service performance is linked with national government performance).
The link between conflict and mining has changed over time: many ongoing or emerging local conflicts
are about land issues, about (perceived) social inequality between communities, about failing DDR
programs. Many of these local conflicts persist because of bad governance, underperforming state
services. To be successful, responsible sourcing initiatives should adopt a broader approach taking into
consideration the above-mentioned multi-dimensionality, when designing due diligence programs.
Clearly, local and national governance are key issues: mining reforms are now often instrumentalized
by local (political) entrepreneurs, making them barely sustainable. Moreover, the implication of local
elites in formalization processes can fuel economic and political competition, eventually deteriorating in
(violent) conflicts.
There is still an important regional dimension that contributes to the perpetuation of existing conflicts:
neighboring countries still facilitate smuggling of illegally exploited natural resources in eastern DRC. The
issues around governance and the regional dimension surpass the technical approaches that characterize
most responsible sourcing initiatives. These efforts should be accompanied by strategies addressing the
political dimension of the problem.
International industrial and semi-industrial companies still bear a heavy responsibility: eager to
generate huge profits, these companies exploit governance flaws, and do not always reckon with local
sensitivities, neglecting rights, socio-economic situation, and grievances of local communities. This
negligence triggers social tensions and unrest, and even armed resistance. In some cases, these companies
even revert to contracting state security actors as private security agents, and as such contribute directly
to the present-day ‘conflict minerals’ problem.

36

There is an urgent need for a profound, participative evaluation process that scrutinizes the ASM
sector as a whole, and the performance and effectiveness of responsible sourcing initiatives in particular.
In order to yield sustainable results, responsible sourcing initiatives must take into account the different
dimensions and factors discussed in this paper, and must incorporate the broader range of issues that
interface with conflict and mining: focusing only on one dimension (e.g. trying to guarantee clean supply
chains), and ignoring historical, cultural, social, economic and political contexts in which ASM takes place
in eastern Congo, is a recipe for failure.
Over the next year, IPIS will develop a few in-depth case studies on conflict financing with USAID
support. Through qualitative field research, we will further illustrate the complex web of dynamics that
underlie specific mining conflicts in eastern DRC, notably how these conflicts emerge, evolve and persist.

37

6. BIBLIOGRAPHY
• Agenonga Chober A. and G. Berghezan, La CODECO, au coeur de l’insécurité en Ituri, Brussels: GRIP, 2021
• Autesserre S., The Trouble with the Congo: Local violence and the failure of international peacebuilding. New York: Cambridge University
Press, 2010
• Berman B., “Ethnicity, patronage and the African state: The politics of uncivil nationalism”, African Affairs, 97, 388 (1998), 305-341.
• Bouvy A., I. Finnbbakk, J.-M. Mazio, E. Mongo, and F. Van Lierde, The FRPI peace process at an impasse. Lessons from a community-based
and political approach to DDR in the Congo, Governance in Conflict Network: Insecurity Livelihoods Series, May 2021
• COSOC-GL, La ruée vers l’or à Shabunda: Pratiques et impacts de l’exploitation minière par dragues, August 2015
• Fahey D., Ituri. Gold, land, and ethnicity in North-Eastern Congo. Rift Valley Institute/Usalama Project, 2013
• Global Witness, River of gold: Voices from Shabunda, December 2016
• Global Witness, Briefing Omate: How a senior Congolese army officer receives a major slice of gold production from a mining company with
consent of a court, 31 October 2017
• HRW, DR Congo: Kidnappings skyrocket in east, Human Rights Watch, 16 December 2015, https://www.hrw.org/news/2015/12/16/drcongo-kidnappings-skyrocket-east
• Huguet A., “RDC: En Ituri sous état de siège une milice fait la loi sur son territoire”, La Libre, 21 January 2022
• IPIS, The formalisation of artisanal mining in the Democratic Republic of the Congo and Rwanda, commissioned by the Center for
International Forestry Research (CIFOR), 2012
• IPIS, Analysis of the interactive map of artisanal mining areas in Eastern DR Congo, November 2013
• IPIS, ‘Conflict Minerals’ initiatives in DR Congo: Perceptions of local mining communities, November 2013
• IPIS, Roadblock rebels: IPIS maps important mechanism of conflict funding in Central Africa, December 2017: https://ipisresearch.be/
roadblock-rebels-ipis-maps-important-mechanism-conflict-funding-central-africa/
• IPIS, Mapping artisanal mining areas and mineral supply chains in eastern DR Congo Impact of armed interference & responsible sourcing, in
collaboration with DIIS, April 2019
• IPIS, Transparency and formalization of gold supply chains in Eastern Congo, Antwerp: IPIS, April 2020
• IPIS, Analyse quantitative du secteur minier artisanal dans la region Bamuguba-Nord (Shabunda, Sud Kivu), Internal report, October 2020
• IPIS, Persistent violence in gold-rich Ituri province, DR Congo: Root causes and impact on local populations, IPIS Briefing, August 2020
• IPIS, Conflict analysis and stakeholder mapping in South Kivu and Ituri, commissioned by Madini project, April 2021
• IPIS, Grievance, governance and gold in the eastern Congo, IPIS Briefing, December 2021 – January 2022
• Kivu Security Tracker, The landscape of armed groups in Eastern Congo: Missed opportunities, protracted insecurity and self-fulfilling
prophecies, February 2021
• Kivu Security Tracker, In Ituri Province the FARDC are unable to distinguish CODECO militias from civilians, 15 November 2021
• Le Billon P., Wars of Plunder: Conflicts, profits and the politics if resources, 2012
• Lezhnev S., Conflict gold to responsible gold: A roadmap for companies & governments, The Sentry, February 2021, p. 12
• Matthysen K. et R. Wangachumo, Des brouillards et de la fumée sur Osso: Prototype d’un système opaque de l’exploitation semi-industrielle de
l’or à Walikale, PAX, LPI and IPIS, 2015
• Martin A., A Golden Web, IMPACT, November 2019
• Musamba J. and C. Vogel, The problem with “conflict minerals”, 21 October 2021, https://www.dissentmagazine.org/online_articles/theproblem-with-conflict-minerals
• Mwetaminwa J. and T. Vircoulon, Un scandale sino-congolais. L’exploitation illégale des minerais et des forêts par les entreprises chinoises au
Sud-Kivu, IFRI, February 2022
• Neumann M. et al., Traceability in artisanal gold supply chains in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: Lessons learned from the Kampene Gold
Pilot Project, BGR, March 2019

38

• Nyenyezi Bisoka A., K. Vlassenroot, and H. Hoebeke, The limits of President Tshisekedi’s security strategy in the Democratic Republic of Congo,
LSE, 28 April 2020, https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/crp/2020/04/28/the-limits-of-president-tshisekedis-security-strategy-in-the-democraticrepublic-of-congo/
• OECD, OECD Due Diligence Guidance for Responsible Supply Chains of Minerals from Conflict-Affected and High-Risk Areas: Second Edition, 2013
• PRG, IPIS, SFR and Ulula, Evaluating due diligence programs for conflict minerals: A matched analysis of 3T mines in Eastern Congo, Los Angeles/
Antwerp, November 2020
• Save Act Mine, Le commerce illicite de l’or dans la region des Grands Lacs finance les groups armés à l’est de la RDC, Goma, April 2021
• Schouten P., J. Murairi, and S. Kubuya, “Everything that moves will be taxed”: The political economy of roadblocks in North and South Kivu. IPIS/
DIIS/ASSODIP, November 2017
• Sofala Partners and BetterChain, The barriers to financial access for the responsible minerals trade in the GLR, commissioned by Public-Private
Alliance for Responsible Minerals Trade (PPA), April 2019
• Sungura A., N. Ndeze, M. Mbamba, H. Rugambwa, and L. Kitonga, Politics of the past and the present: The changes and continuities of conflict
in eastern Congo’s Petit Nord-Kivu, Insecure Livelihoods Series, CRG, GEC-SH, GIC, May 2021
• Turner, T., Congo wars: Conflict, myth and reality. London/New York: Zed Books, 2007
• UN Group of Experts reports:
• Report of the Panel of Experts on the illegal exploitation of natural resources and other forms of wealth of the Democratic Republic of Congo,
12 April 2001, UN Doc. S/2001/357
• Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 7 June 2019, S/2019/469
• Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 2 June 2020, S/2020/482
• Final report of the UN Group of Experts on the DRC, 10 June 2021, S/2021/560
• Vermeersch P., Theories of ethnic mobilization: Overview and recent trends, Leuven: CRPS Working paper No. 3, 2011
• Verweijen J. and J. Brabant, “Cows and guns: Cattle-related conflict and armed violence in Fizi and Itombwe, eastern DR Congo”, The Journal
of Modern African Studies, 55, 1 (2017), 1-27
• Verweijen J., Shedding light on why mining companies in eastern Congo are under attack, The Conversation, 30 august 2017
• Verweijen J., Why violence in the South Kivu Highlands Is not ‘ethnic’ (and other misconceptions about the crisis), KST, 31 August 2020: https://
blog.kivusecurity.org/why-violence-in-the-south-kivu-highlands-is-not-ethnic-and-other-misconceptions-about-the-crisis/
• Vircoulon T., Ituri: Résurgence du conflit et échec de la politique de consolidation de la paix, IFRI, June 2021
• Vlassenroot K. “Land and conflict: The case of Masisi”. In K. Vlassenroot and T. Raeymaekers (Eds.), Conflict and social Transformation in
eastern DR Congo, Ghent: Academia Press Scientific Publishers, 2004
• Vlassenroot K., S. Perrot, and J. Cuvelier, “Doing business out of war: An analysis of the UPDF’s presence in the Democratic Republic of
Congo”, Journal of Eastern African Studies, 6, 1 (2012), 2-21
• Vlassenroot K., E. Mudinga and J. Musamba, “Navigating social spaces: Armed mobilization and circular return in Eastern Congo”, Journal
of Refugee Studies, 33, 4 (2020), 832-852
• Vogel C. and J. Musamba, Recycling rebels? Demobilization in the Congo. Rift Valley Institute, PSRP Briefing Paper 11, March 2016
• Vogel C. and J. Musamba, “Brokers of crisis: The everyday uncertainty of Eastern Congo’s mineral négociants”, Journal of Modern African
Studies, 55, 4 (2017), 567-592
• Wakenge C.I., Prédation et violence à huis-clos: Artisanat minier et dynamiques des conflits à Fizi, Kalehe et Shabunda (Sud-Kivu, RD Congo),
October 2020
• Wakenge C.I., M.-R. Bashwira Nyenyezi, S.I. Bergh, and J. Cuvelier, “From ‘conflict minerals’ to peace? Reviewing mining reforms, gender,
and state performance in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo”, The Extractive Industries and Society, 8, 2 (2021)
• Wakenge C.I., D. Dijkzeul, and K. Vlassenroot, “Regulating the old game of smuggling? Coltan mining, trade and reforms in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo”, Journal of Modern African Studies, 56, 3 (2018), 497-522
• Wennmann A., “The political economy of conflict financing: A comprehensive approach beyond natural resources”, Global Governance, 13
(2007), 427-444
• Wennmann A., “Economic dimensions of armed groups: profiling the financing, costs, and agendas and their implications for mediated
engagements”, International Review of the Redd Cross, 93, 882 (2011), 333-352

39

V.U. Filip Reyniers, Directeur, IPIS, Italiëlei 98A, 2000 Antwerpen I Layout: SAKADO I D/2022/4320/12

Independent research and

capacity building for durable peace,
sustainable development

and human rights

Haut

fgtquery v.1.9, 9 février 2024