Compliance Lagging on 'Conflict Minerals'

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Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Action this day
Hospice_Houngbo   10/29/2012 6:41:53 PM
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@R.J.Matthews,

"Although the DRC has 60 percent of Africa's hydroelectric potential, only 7 percent of the country's population has access to electricity."

That's a real concern. The leadership is "probably" living in opulence while the majority of the population is living in poverty and want - . What do we call that? I can't help thinking that most of the concolese people problems are caused by bad leadership and the lack of vision. Soun like "the beautiful ones are not yet born".  

Thanks for all the interesting references.

R.J.Matthews
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Re: Action this day
R.J.Matthews   10/29/2012 2:23:35 PM
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Agree Hospice Houngbo the DRC should be a very rich country there is plenty of potential outside the mineral sector, the DRC should be able to feed most of Africa and supply all of it with electricity.

Something that is often missed by critics of a crack down on the mineral trade.

http://www.tradeinvestafrica.com/news/310850.htm
"DRC has 120 million hectares of fertile land out of which only 2% are currently cultivated. The agreement is part of the government's efforts to improve food security,"said Prof. Buabua

http://www.anapi.org/en/spip.php?article607
Over 120 million ha of arable and fertile land conducive to agriculture are concentrated in DRC. The weather allows a wide scale spread of agricultural activities throughout the year.

http://www.newera.com.na/articles/45337/DRC-targets--Namibian-farmers

The DRC government requested Namibian farmers to farm on vast swathes of unoccupied arable land available in that country and to engage in both crop production and animal husbandry to benefit both countries and to improve food security.

http://www.mbendi.com/indy/powr/af/zr/p0005.htm

Although the DRC has 60 percent of Africa's hydroelectric potential, only 7 percent of the country's population has access to electricity. Lack of local demand has led the DRC to export to SINELAC, Angola, Burundi, the Congo, Rwanda, Zambia and Zimbabwe.

In 2001, electricity production was 5.243 billion kWh, of which 3.839 billion kWh was consumed and 1.097 billion kWh was exported.

The DRC has the potential to produce 150,000 megawatts of power, approximately three times Africa's present consumption.

The Congo river is the most magnificent wealth of the country. Second only to the Amazon river in terms of water volume, it stretches a distance of almost 4,300 kilometres. For electricity production as well as water, the potential of the Congo river remains largely unused.

 

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Action this day
Hospice_Houngbo   10/29/2012 11:11:02 AM
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@R.J.Matthews,

Thanks for the article. It is true that many laws need to be revised in the country including the laws governing land ownership. It is sad to hear that "it is difficult for local people to find anywhere to grow their crops" when we know that DRC possesses very vast areas that are yet to be exploited.  

R.J.Matthews
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Re: Action this day
R.J.Matthews   10/29/2012 10:26:59 AM
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Came across an article that might interest you Hospice Houngbo. Some efforts are taking place but the money from the conflict mineral trade seems to make every other problem worse making it too easy to turn to the gun to settle disagreements.

http://www.voanews.com/content/drc_revises_land_policy/1534278.html

GOMA - Farmers organizations have been meeting in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo to discuss changes to the country's land law, which is being revised. Experts say the current law, mainly dating from colonial times, is out of date and failing to prevent conflict. The land problems are acute in the country's North Kivu province...

 

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Action this day
Hospice_Houngbo   10/29/2012 9:37:12 AM
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@Anna Young,

"The government of the Congo has a civil war on its hands and may not even care about the reforms you suggest."

Then the priority here is how to put an end to the civil war. But apparently, this will not happen ... tomorrow.

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Action this day
Hospice_Houngbo   10/29/2012 9:30:45 AM
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@R.J.Matthews

I can see you are a very wise and objective person. You are right when you said that the international community should unite to fight criminal activities, but we should not forget that the task may be much easier if social justice is first enforced in unsable regions.

R.J.Matthews
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Re: Action this day
R.J.Matthews   10/29/2012 6:36:08 AM
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Anna Young/Hospice Houngo think politicians minds are suddenly concentrated when it is their future at stake so you can certainly bet they care now!

Agree that many DRC institutions are not that strong and certainly they cannot handle the international problem of the conflict mineral trade on their own.

The reality is that reforms in general governance in the DRC are going to take years if not longer and anyway can happen at the same time as reforms elsewhere.

Even if the DRC was a better functioning society it might still struggle, if you look at the drug trade plenty of better governed countries have trouble dealing with it and it takes multinational cooperation to make sure the problem is not even worse.

In the same way people should not buy drugs that will go to finance terrorists and criminal gangs there should be the same concerns about conflict minerals.

 

Anna young
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Re: Action this day
Anna young   10/29/2012 4:19:58 AM
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Who's going to take the lead in instituting the reform you suggest? The government of the Congo has a civil war on its hands and may not even care about the reforms you suggest.

Anna young
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Re: Action this day
Anna young   10/29/2012 4:16:03 AM
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You are right. The antidote for bad governance is for the international community to get involved but we've seen with the example of Somalia that this doesn't always work out. It would be a nightmare in the case of the Congo. So, we are left with the tinkering of Dodd-Frank.

Hospice_Houngbo
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Re: Action this day
Hospice_Houngbo   10/28/2012 10:46:22 PM
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@Anna Young,

"What is the govenment of the Congo doing"

Very good question. I believe that the regulations should also be accompanied by a profound reform in governance.

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