UPI en Español  |   UPI Asia  |   About UPI  |   My Account
Search:
Go

Report: 10-year-olds work at Congo mine

|
 
Published: April 16, 2012 at 9:16 AM

KINSHASA, Democratic Republic of Congo, April 16 (UPI) -- Children as young as 10 work in a mining operation in the Democratic Republic of Congo owned by British commodity giant Glencore, a BBC investigation showed.

International law bans mines from employing workers under 18 but the BBC said undercover cameras filmed several under that age in the Glencore-owned Tilwezembe mining operation.

Ivan Glasenberg, Glencore's chief executive officer, said the company wasn't using child labor to make a profit, the BBC reported Sunday.

The child miners belonged to a group of wildcat miners who "raided our land in 2010 … against all of our authorization," Glasenberg said. "We are pleading with the government to remove the ... miners from our concession."

Glencore stopped mining at the Tilwezembe location in 2008, and said the mine since has been taken over by local workers, who are mining without the company's permission.

The BBC report tracked buses leaving the mine and going to a processing plant owned by one of Glencore's main partners in the DRC. Documents obtained by the BBC indicated some of the copper from the Tilwezembe operation was sent from the processing plant to a Glencore smelter in Zambia.

The broadcaster's investigation also turned up evidence of acid pollution in a river near the Glencore copper refinery in Luilu. A Swiss non-governmental organization said its acidity tests indicated the waste water had a Ph value of 1.9 on a scale in which 1 is pure acid and 7 neutral, the BBC said.

Glencore said the pollution occurred long before it took over the refinery.

© 2012 United Press International, Inc. All Rights Reserved. Any reproduction, republication, redistribution and/or modification of any UPI content is expressly prohibited without UPI's prior written consent.

Order reprints
Join the conversation
Most Popular Collections
'Star Trek Into Darkness' screening NBC upfronts Met Ball 2013
'Great Gatsby' premieres in New York Spire raised on top of One WTC 2013: Celebrity break ups and divorces
Additional World News Stories
1 of 18
Palestinian  Security Forces Patrol the Border With Egypt.
View Caption
A members of the Hamas security forces patrol the border area between Gaza and Egypt, in the southern Gaza Strip May 20, 2013. Egyptian police angered by the kidnapping of seven colleagues by Islamist gunmen kept a crossing into the Gaza Strip closed again for four days, stranding hundreds of Palestinian travellers, As Tunnels between Egypt and Gaza closed and border was declared as military zone. Palestinian security forces patrol around the border, witnesses said. UPI/Ismael Mohamad
fark
News: Unexpected gatecrashers ransack house. Fark: Baboons. Baboons everywhere
You can do a lot of bad things as a priest and hang on to your job. Plagiarizing sermons from sermons.com...
Sponsored Content is Pretty Farking Awesome (Featured Partner)
Guatemalan ex-president convicted of genocide last week gets a mulligan
Is Pope Francis a wizard?
I pity the fool that don't wish Mr. T a happy 61st birthday