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Congo suspends operations at Chinese mine following spill

After a spill in the south of this resource-rich nation, the Democratic Republic of Congo suspended operations at a Chinese operated mining site. Mines Minister Louis Watum Kabamba announced late Thursday.

Congo Dongfang International Mining, which sources mainly copper and cobalt in Central Africa, is an arm of China's Zhejiang Cobalt.

Watum told X he had come to Lubumbashi, Congo's second largest city, after learning about a spill that had affected many neighborhoods.

He claimed that the company did not meet the environmental standards and was causing serious water pollution, which exposed the public to health risks.

He added that the three-month suspension could be extended, if needed.

Watum stated that "CDM should fully repair any environmental damage, pay its employees, compensate the populations affected, and adhere to the Mining Code." He added that an investigation into the incident would take place.

Congo, which accounts over 70% of global output of cobalt, frozen exports of the metallic in February to curb supplies and drive prices up.

The authorities lifted the export ban on October 16 in order to resume exports based on a quota-system. Sources in the industry said last month that cobalt producers were still waiting on government approval before they could restart shipments. (Reporting and writing by Congo Newsroom, Anait Miridzhanian, Editing by Kim Coghill).

(source: Reuters)