UN chief cautions against sanctions in Congo

By Staff
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United Nations, Feb 16: UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon warned against sanctions targeting the illegal minerals trade in the Democratic Republic of Congo, saying they would do little good and could harm the country's first democratically elected government.

Ban, in a report to the UN Security Council released yesterday, was responding to a panel of UN experts that urged action to stop the plundering of minerals, including gold and diamonds from one of world's poorest countries.

The Security Council yesterday also extended by two months the mandate for the 17,000-strong UN peacekeeping mission in the former Belgian colony.

The UN mission helped restore order after a 1998-2003 war killed an estimated 4 million Congolese, mainly through disease and hunger, and the council renewed the mandate for a short time while it awaits another UN report on the future configuration of the force.

Ban's report studied the impact of proposed sanctions aimed at punishing those who trade in stolen minerals.

He concluded that sanctions would create an opening for other unscrupulous dealers, rob small miners of income, and possibly create social unrest and a backlash.

''While sanctions may inconvenience their targets, the general effect will be to diminish only marginally the general practices they are designed to curtail,'' Ban's report said.

''Imposing United Nations sanctions now may be perceived as punitive'' against the government sworn into office in December following a lengthy election process. ''This might be another reason why United Nations sanctions may not be advisable at the present time,'' Ban said.

The Security Council was considering sanctions against illegal trade in gold, cassiterite, copper, cobalt and diamonds.

Instead of sanctions, Ban recommended promoting security in mining areas, improving the business climate by discouraging fraud and extortion, and demanding that mining companies adhere to environmental standards.

Congo's five-year civil war drew in most of the vast central African nation's neighbors, some of whom have played active roles in the illegal export of its resources.

Others involved include the Congolese military and various armed militias, the UN experts said.

Reuters

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