Hitting the gold mine: Ottawa NGO imports first legal gold from the Congo - Action News
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Hitting the gold mine: Ottawa NGO imports first legal gold from the Congo

Partnership Africa Canada is an Ottawa-based NGO that is spearheading efforts to ethically import gold from the Congo to Canada.

Almost all of the Congo's gold is illegally traded on the black market

Partnership Africa Canada is working to legally buy gold from small mining communities in the eastern regions of Congo. (PAC/Facebook)

A little over a month ago, JoanneLebertboarded a plane to make the long flight from the Democratic Republic of the Congo to Toronto. She was helping transport a tiny package that could change the way gold from the Congo istraded internationally.

Lebert, executive director of Partnership Africa Canada,was carrying 238 grams of raw gold purchased from mines near the remote town of Mambasa. According to PAC, Lebert'simport was one ofthe first legal gold purchasesfrom the African nation.

Partnership Africa Canada is an Ottawa-based NGO that is spearheading efforts to ethically import gold from the Congo to Canada. They sent their first shipment to a jewelry store in Toronto that makes fair trade pieces.

An estimated $28 billion in unrefined gold lies deep beneath the soil in the eastern regions of the Congo, but 98per cent of it leaves the country illegally, according to the International Peace Information Service.

"Gold in the Congo is an extremely informal sector," said Guillaume de Brier,a researcher at IPIS."A miner will find gold [and]as his wealth is very remote in the forest, he will sell it to a top seller."

Workers stand above a gold mining site in the eastern Congo. (Sven Torfinn/Partnership Africa Canada)

'You just need your courage and your tools'

In the province of Ituri, where Mambasais located,the gold industry is mostly run by armed groups who patrol the mines.

More than half of Mambasa'ssmall population work in the60 mines surrounding the town and most ofthe sites were run by armed fighters, according to the International Peace Information Service.

"People have no lands, they usually have no education," said de Brier."So if you want to be a miner, you just need your courage and your tools."

The first 238 grams of gold that arrived in May was enough to make about 40 or 50 rings. (Deborah MacAskill/CBC)

The turbulent situation in the Congo mining communities is why Partnership Africa Canada had to place a representative on the ground to supervise the export, said Joanne Lebert.

In order to fairly export the gold, Lebertsaid that the organization had to have a fully documented history of each shipment, meaning it has to be sourced directly from local miners. It takes weeks to gather the necessary paperwork, but Lebertsaid over 700 miners in the area have already accepted PAC's proposal.

Thoughthe miners make less profit with PAC than they would on the black market, they know the process the gold undergoes is legal, she added.

"They know the prices they receiveincludes the cost of transportation, the cost of the exporter, and so on."

The first shipment of gold from Partnership Africa Canada came from a mine near the village of Mambasa. (Elise von Scheel/CBC News)

Mined by hand

One gram of gold sells for about $50 CAD, making it an attractive mineralfor artisanal miners, who make up about 80 per cent of miners in the Congo. Artisanal mining, including gold mining, is done by digging, washing and sorting the minerals by hand.

Many artisanal mine workers in eastern the Congo are children, according toWorld Vision.

Working to prove that imported gold from the central African nation wasn't illegally mined has presented complications for PAC.

"If you want to certify your gold, you have to make sure you know from where it was extracted," said de Brier. He added that the 238 grams Lebertimported was "a small amount, but it's an amount that still counts."

Landing in Canada

When Lebertdisembarked in Toronto, the co-founder of the store who bought the gold met her at the airport.

After those 238 grams of gold arrived at the end of May, Robin Gambhir said Fair Trade Jewelry will be receiving bigger shipments from PAC every month going forward.

"It was enough to make about 40 or 50 rings and we'll be doing another export shortly, and we plan on increasing the volume every month," he said.

Robin Gambhir says gold shipments from the Congo will ramp up due to the success of the pilot project. (Annie Poulin/CBC News)

"Part of the challenge is figuring out how to safely export the gold from the [Congo] There's a security risk in carrying these items."

Gambhirsaid he hopes as shipments increase dealing with Congolese customs officials will become easier and faster.

PAC has plans to eventually distribute the gold globally to other fair trade stores.

With files from Annie Poulin