Ban on minerals in conflict areas extended
Publish date: 24 November 2025
Issue Number: 1153
Diary: IBA Legalbrief Africa
Category: DRC
The DRC has extended for six months a ban on the trading of minerals from dozens of artisanal mining sites in conflict-hit North and South Kivu provinces, the Mines Ministry said. According to Channel Africa, the extension adds compliance pressure on global supply chains for tin, tantalum and tungsten, key inputs for the electronics, automotive and aerospace industries. The order applies to 38 sites producing coltan, cassiterite and wolframite – ingredients for tin, tantalum and tungsten. Rwanda-backed M23 rebels and other armed groups have captured significant territory in mineral-rich eastern DRC. Mineral wealth has long been seen as fuelling violence in the east, with combatants using coltan, cassiterite and gold sites to fund their operations, according to UN experts and rights groups. A UN report in December 2024 said revenues from smuggled minerals were funding military operations, sustaining a war economy and prolonging violence. The Mines Ministry order prohibits sourcing and export from the mining sites in question and says they may face independent audits by the Ministry or international bodies, including the UN and Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. The DRC filed criminal complaints in France and Belgium against Apple subsidiaries in 2024, alleging supply chains included minerals pillaged from conflict zones, despite Apple’s disclosures under US law. Apple denied the allegations, saying it had told suppliers to stop purchasing minerals from the DRC and Rwanda. US courts have also heard claims against Apple, Google, Tesla, Dell and Microsoft over alleged reliance on cobalt mined under abusive conditions in DRC, though those suits were dismissed.