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Alphamin, a Congo tin mining company, says that production has resumed after the rebels withdrew.

Alphamin, a Congo tin mining company, says that production has resumed after the rebels withdrew.

Alphamin Resources announced that it had restarted the tin production in its Bisie mine, located in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo. This was after rebels retreated from the nearby town of Walikale.

In a statement, the miner stated that it was processing tin-ore stockpiled and plans to resume activities at its underground mining facility later this month when more employees return to their jobs.

Alphamin temporarily halted its operations in Bisie in March, which produced about 6% of the global tin supply a year. A rebel group backed by Congo’s eastern neighbor Rwanda advanced into Walikale, a town adjacent to Bisie.

After capturing Goma and Bukavu in early 2018, the M23 rebels quickly advanced towards Walikale, two key cities in Congo’s North and South Kivu Provinces.

The rebels left the town at the beginning of this month, after they agreed to engage in talks with the government as part of a peace agreement mediated with the U.S. Government.

The Toronto-listed firm also announced that it had resumed exports.

Alphamin has lowered its production forecast for tin to 17,500 tonnes from 20,000 tons earlier due to disruption. Alphamin produced around 17,000 tons last year.

Alphamin reported that production in the quarter ending March fell 18%, to 4,300 tonnes, compared with 5,200 tons the previous quarter. Felix Njini reported from Johannesburg. Jane Merriman, Topra Chopra and Jane Merriman edited the article.

(source: Reuters)