How conflict minerals fuel war in eastern DR Congo amid US sanctions
The move underscores growing scrutiny of the conflict mineral trade fuelling violence in eastern DR Congo. Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo – The United
The move underscores growing scrutiny of the conflict mineral trade fuelling violence in eastern DR Congo. Bukavu, Democratic Republic of the Congo – The United States has imposed sanctions on Rwandan businessmen and companies it says are helping finance the M23 rebellion in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) through the illicit trade in conflict minerals, signalling growing international pressure over a conflict spurred by the region’s vast mineral wealth. The US Department of the Treasury said the measures are intended to disrupt networks smuggling minerals out of the DRC to finance the Rwandan-backed armed group M23. The two individuals sanctioned are Jean Malic Kalima, chairman of Gasabo Gold Refinery, and Bosco Kayobotsi, the company’s managing director. The sanctioned companies are Gasabo Gold Refinery Ltd, Bugambira Mines Ltd, Wolfram Mining and Processing Ltd, and Rwinkwavu Mining Corporation Ltd, all based in Rwanda. “The M23 and its supporters are exploiting the DRC’s vast mineral resources – wealth that rightfully belongs to the Congolese people – to finance the purchase of weapons, pay combatants and sustain a destabilising insurgency that has triggered a serious humanitarian crisis,” the Treasury said in a statement received by Al Jazeera on June 25. Conflict driven by minerals Dady Saleh, an economist based in Kinshasa, said the conflict in the eastern DRC has long been shaped by competition over natural resources. “Let there be no mistake. The wars we have been experiencing for 30 years in the eastern region of the country are, above all, economic in nature,” he told Al Jazeera.
He argued that external powers often pursue strategic economic interests in conflict zones, citing Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and US policy towards Venezuela as examples. The Treasury said the region’s mineral wealth should be a driver of development rather than conflict, arguing that curbing illicit mineral flows would create space for legitimate business while securing critical minerals for global industries. Saleh said the latest sanctions suggest international attitudes towards Kigali may be shifting. “The DRC’s natural resources have been plundered for decades, both before and after independence. Today, that plundering has intensified and increasingly takes place through proxy actors,” he said. For many Congolese, the sanctions are also seen as a long-overdue acknowledgement of what they say has been happening for years. “We are pleased that the US is gradually coming to understand the underhand tactics Kigali is employing on our territory and that the masks are slowly beginning to slip. We have suffered so much because of our natural resources, which were given to us by the Creator, and that is not fair,” said Nestor Sadiki, a resident of Goma, the capital of North Kivu province. Rwanda’s rejection of the allegations Rwandan officials have rejected allegations linking Kigali to mineral trafficking or support for armed groups. Foreign Minister Olivier Nduhungirehe described the US sanctions as “biased” and “unjustified”, arguing that punitive measures do not resolve the conflict. He said that if sanctions alone could bring peace to eastern DRC, the war would have ended long ago, and that lasting solutions require shared regional responsibility rather than selective blame.
