Artisanal mining (2003–2011) Bisie mine was established after a hunter discovered
cassiterite there, which led to a frenzy. Artisinal mining at Bisie began in 2003. Following the
Second Congo War,
Mai Mai-allied militia in were to form the 85th brigade of the
national army, receive training and then fragment when they deployed throughout the country. The militia refused to cooperate, however, and since then they controls the production and transport of tin, and the economics of Bisie, and nearby Manoire village, under the supervision of Colonel Samy Matumo. The mine's estimated tin production has been as high $100 million a year. The militia extorted "taxes" on everything from entry to the mine, to mud hut for shelter $50 a month. They also collect sales taxes, $20 a week, from small peddlers Tin was mined by hand through
open-pit mining, and bags of tin that weighed 110 pounds or more were then dropped off at a central location, from which porters carried them on foot by individuals for over 30 miles, which typically took two days. When it arrived it was driven to the village of Kilambo, where it was loaded into Soviet-style cargo planes, flown to
Goma, and sold to international dealers, such as
Malaysia Smelting Corporation. The militia controlled the entire vicinity of Bisie and allowed only those who paid the taxes. Mining and Processing Congo (MPC), a consortium of British and South African investors, bought mining rights for Bisie in 2006, but the militia thwarted their attempts to reach the area. They in the past have shot and injured people associated with the consortium. After they were forced to evacuate, MPC applied for
Force Majeure, which was granted on 26 March 2009. By July 2008, the mine was retaken by the DRC's military, but conditions under the
FARDC were poor, with child labor and outbreaks of disease in the area. The mine was intimately linked to world markets. In October 2008 the prices of tin increased 37% with news of fighting in the region. According to some observers, the failure to inaugurate legal forms of production indicated corruption at the regional and federal levels of the DRC. In March 2009, the 85th
FARDC Brigade was replaced by the 1st Brigade of ex-
CNDP (Congrès National pour la Défense du Peuple) members; this was then renamed the 212th Brigade in September 2009. On 9 September 2010, President Kabila banned on all artisanal mining in Walikale territory. Two days later, he suspended all mining and mineral exports from North Kivu, South Kivu and Maniema Provinces. This mining and export ban, together with the
Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act and pressure from the
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), caused buyers to buy less at lower prices. The Dodd-Frank legislation requires US-listed companies who obtain minerals from the DRC and adjoining countries, to implement due diligence measures. This legislation served as a catalyst for other international and regional initiatives to increase the accountability of corporations who source minerals from the eastern DRC and the wider region. The mine was profiled in the 2010 documentary
Blood in the Mobile. Mineral production and trade slowed during Kabila's ban, but did not completely stop. Wimmer and Hilgert (2011) and acquired the remaining 30% of the project in July 2012. In 2012, the number of artisanal miners at the site had declined sharply, due in great part to the deep tunnels now needed to reach the ore. The Force Majeure was lifted at the Bisie Project in February 2012, and Alphamin Resources established a camp on the Bisie ridge and began exploratory drilling in July 2012. Artisanal mining continuing on a smaller scale alongside Alphamin's exploration. However, after members of an artisanal cooperative destroyed Alphamin's camp on 16 July 2014, the cooperative's activities on the site were suspended. Alphamin rebuilt the camp and recommenced exploration campaign in September 2014. ==See also==