Congo 'suffers as pillage goes on'By Evelyn Leopold of Reuters at the United Nations
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Filed: 22/10/2002)
The plunder of gems and minerals from the Democratic Republic of the Congo is continuing unabated, a United Nations-appointed panel reported yesterday.
Although fighting that once involved armies from seven African nations has diminished, so-called elite networks are running a self-financing war economy centered on pillage.
Criminal groups linked to the Rwandan, Ugandan and Zimbabwean armies have benefited from regional "micro-conflicts", the panel's 59-page report to the UN Security Council said.
"The elite networks derive financial benefit through a variety of criminal activities, including theft, embezzlement, diversion of public funds, undervaluation of goods, smuggling, false invoicing, non-payment of taxes, kickback to public officials and bribery," it added.
Much of the death and malnutrition in eastern Congo is due less to fighting than pillaging that has left villagers without a livelihood.
Diamonds from Kisangani, for example, are marketed by criminal networks and the profit laundered through the purchase of large quantities of sugar, soap, cloth and medicines from Dubai, thereby devastating local industries.
The researchers, who issued two previous reports over the past year on how natural resources were fuelling the Congo war, called on the UN to impose financial restrictions on 29 companies and 54 individuals involved in the pillaging.
Most are in Africa but the list includes four Belgian diamond firms and the Belgian Groupe George Forrest mining operation, which is in partnership with the OM Group, based in Cleveland, Ohio.
The report also names 85 multinationals in South Africa, Europe and America that it says have violated ethical guidelines on conflict zones set down by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development.
These include Anglo American plc, Barclays Bank, Bayer AG, De Beers diamond company and the Cabot Corporation, among others.
While Rwanda has withdrawn some troops, it has left soldiers behind disguised as Congolese. It runs a "Congo Desk of the Rwandan Patriotic Army," which in 1999 contributed £210 million, or 80 per cent, of the military budget.
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