Conflict resources are
natural resources extracted in a
conflict zone and sold to perpetuate the fighting. There is both statistical and anecdotal evidence that the presence of precious commodities can prolong conflicts (a "
resource curse"). An unfortunate irony is that many countries rich in minerals are impoverished in terms of their capacity for governance. Conflict, corruption and bribery may be seen as the typical costs of doing business. The extraction and sale of
blood diamonds, also known as "conflict diamonds", is a better-known phenomenon which occurs under virtually identical conditions.
Petroleum can also be a conflict resource. Other commodities are also involved in financing conflict.
History The concept of "conflict resource", or "conflict
commodity" emerged in the late 1990s, initially in relation to the "
blood diamonds" that were financing rebellions in
Angola and
Sierra Leone. Then "conflict timber" financed hostilities in
Cambodia and
Liberia.
Conventions The concept was first officially discussed by the
UN General Assembly in the context of 'conflict diamonds': The
UN Security Council has since referred to conflict resources in several resolutions, particularly resolutions 1533 and I698.97. Since 1996 the
Bonn International Center for Conversion has tracked
resource governance and
conflict intensity by country. Aside from
fossil fuels, metals, diamonds, and timber it tracks the
governance of other
primary goods that might fund conflicts, including:
poppy seeds and
talc (Afghanistan),
rubber (Ivory Coast),
cotton (Zambia), and
cocoa (Indonesia).
Legal frameworks Several countries and organizations, including the
United States,
European Union, and
OECD have designated tantalum, tin, tungsten, and gold connected to conflict in the DRC as
conflict minerals and
legally require companies to report trade or use of conflict minerals as a way to reduce incentives for armed groups to extract and fight over the minerals.
Supporting external conflicts In the 2020s, the concept of conflict minerals was extended to those mined to support conflicts in parts of the world other than where the mining takes place. The
Wagner Group has been granted mining rights in the
Central African Republic in return for securing the continuity of the government. This "blood gold" is then sold to support Russia in the
Russo-Ukrainian War. Wagner also has gold-related operations in Mali and Sudan. == See also ==