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Home » How mines in war-torn DRC lie at heart of Trump’s fortune-hunting in Africa – UK Times
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How mines in war-torn DRC lie at heart of Trump’s fortune-hunting in Africa – UK Times

By uk-times.com25 March 2026No Comments7 Mins Read
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How mines in war-torn DRC lie at heart of Trump’s fortune-hunting in Africa – UK Times
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On The Ground newsletter: Get a weekly dispatch from our international correspondents

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On The Ground

Their eyes shining from dust-white faces, latticed by trails of sweat from working hundreds of feet underground, the thousands of miners who burrow into a rebel-held hillside know the risks – and are prepared to take them to earn a few dollars a day.

Dragging sackfuls of columbo-tantalite, also known as coltan, to the surface via makeshift shafts at the Rubaya mine in the eastern part of Democratic Republic of Congo, is dangerous.

So much so, that in late January this year, about 200 of the young men who toil there were buried alive when the side of their mine collapsed down the slope. Dozens more are feared dead since a second collapse at the beginning of March.

Workers toil deep underground in highly dangerous conditions to mine coltan
Workers toil deep underground in highly dangerous conditions to mine coltan (Karim Shah)

Run by a rebel group known as M23, and backed by neighbouring Rwanda with thousands of troops armed with weapons including anti-aircraft missiles, the mine lies in a region that has been at the centre of successive civil wars and invasions since 1994.

In the 30 years since then, more than $50bn (£37bn) of aid has been funnelled to the country but has done little to solve one of the world’s most prolonged crises, recently compared by Donald Trump to World War Two.

Now Rubaya, along with the vast mineral wealth of the rest of the DRC, is at the centre of Trump’s efforts to secure long-term supplies of critical minerals to the US economy.

Over the last year, Trump has threatened to take over Greenland, which is Danish territory, toppled Venezuela’s president and exploited Ukraine’s war with Russia in an effort to secure similar access to the raw materials that US modern industries demand. His war on Iran may set this back, but his strategic intent remains – he wants to make foreign mines his.

The east of the DRC is rich in tin, gold, timber and other resources that have attracted opportunists and multinational corporations in equal measure since the collapse of the dictatorship of Mobutu Sese Seko, in what was then Zaire during the mid-1990s.

Above all, the region has been a lucrative source of foreign currency for Uganda and Rwanda, a few hours’ drive across the nearby border.

Coltan makes tantalum, and this grey-green metal with its extreme stability at high temperatures is an essential ingredient in high-end engineering of all kinds – especially aerospace and computing.

The Congo holds about 80 per cent of the world’s coltan, 15 per cent of it beneath the unstable earth around Rubaya, which, at its peak, can produce up to 30 per cent of what the globe consumes.

For around $5 a day, the miners here are at the centre of a very big business.

They’re also at the centre of the violent storm that Trump sought to end with a peace deal he brokered between the DRC and Rwanda last year.

“They’ve spent a lot of time killing each other and now they’re going to spend a lot of time hugging and holding hands and taking advantage of the United States of America,” he said in December.

Trump added a most telling motivation for, in part, trying to bring peace: “We’re going to take out some of the rare earth and the assets, and pay. And everybody’s going to make a lot of money.”

Workers at the Rubaya coltan mine in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo
Workers at the Rubaya coltan mine in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (Karim Shah)

As part of the agreement, the DRC’s president Felix Tshisekedi signed a “security for minerals deal” with the US. It is being challenged by his parliament but, from his perspective, it might give his government an edge in trying to secure its access to minerals – like the Rubaya mine but also gold and timber operations – which rebel groups have controlled for decades with the help of neighbouring armies.

Article 2 of the deal says it would “strengthen opportunities for co-operation in security, defense, and protection of critical infrastructure, in safeguarding the integrity of the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s territory and strategic mineral reserves, in promoting regional stability, and in supporting peace and security across central Africa…”

In Rubaya, before the mine collapse, the M23 rebels and their allies were netting at least $1m a month from taxing the output, which is sold in Rwanda and Burundi, where there is no coltan.

Miners clambered down shafts 100 to 200m deep, where temperatures soared and humidity hit close to 100 per cent.

Ventilation came from small household-style fans attached to duct pipes of the sort seen emerging from bathroom extractors.

Webs of cabling and hand-cut streams for washing the mineral webbed the landscape.

“It’s estimated that 10,000 to 11,000 people work here,” said Patrice, a M23-appointed mine manager, speaking before the collapse.

In Rubaya, before the mine collapse, the M23 rebels and their allies were netting at least $1m a month from taxing the output, which is sold in Rwanda and Burundi
In Rubaya, before the mine collapse, the M23 rebels and their allies were netting at least $1m a month from taxing the output, which is sold in Rwanda and Burundi (Karim Shah)

Michel – who emerged from a hole in the ground that disappeared into the blackness carrying white sacks of ore to be washed and searched for coltan – said he was “happy” with his wages and hoped to be able to buy a small shamba, a garden, close to Goma with his wife one day.

In the past, the mine was torn by fighting between militia and government forces who would kill for control of such assets.

For now, it remains outside the control of the central government, which has a well-earned reputation for corruption, while national armed forces are among the worst of human rights abusers in the region.

There has been fierce fighting around Fizi, which is in South Kivu province many hours’ drive from Goma, as government forces have clashed with M23. There has been no sign of the US backing the government in this region.

But there are efforts by the government to sweeten the deal with the Trump administration and US mining houses. DRC officials recently travelled to Washington with a list of offers from various mines across the country.

At present, China dominates the DRC mining industry, investing at least $11bn between 2008 and 2018.

Workers at the Rubaya coltan mine in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo
Workers at the Rubaya coltan mine in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo (AP)

“China now controls over half of global critical minerals production and an estimated 87 per cent of processing and refining,” according to the Africa Centre for Strategic Studies.

“China also produces nearly 70 per cent of rare earth minerals, manufactures 93 per cent of high-strength rare earth permanent magnets, and is responsible for 95 per cent of the necessary heavy processing of critical minerals.

“While China’s critical minerals strategy has emphasised its processing and refining capabilities, Beijing has diversified upstream by acquiring major African mining assets, including Botswana’s Khoemacau copper mine (2023), Mali’s Goulamina lithium mine (2024), and Tanzania’s Ngualla rare earth mine (2025).”

China has also built railways and roads and promised to improve infrastructure, with little regard for political probity or human rights issues.

President Donald Trump greets DRC president Felix Tshisekedi at the US Institute of Peace in Washington, 4 December 2025
President Donald Trump greets DRC president Felix Tshisekedi at the US Institute of Peace in Washington, 4 December 2025 (Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved)

But US companies have been encouraged to get back into the Congo. US mining magnate Glencore is currently in talks to sell 40 per cent of its copper and cobalt operations to the US investment firm Orion.

But these mines are in southern Katanga province – far from north and south Kivu where M23 rebel leaders have denounced the US deal and have used the minerals they control to expand their war. Most recently, they attacked Kisangani, hundreds of miles away, with modern drones.

The only slowing in the M23 mining operations since Trump’s deal with the government in the Congo has been due to the collapse of the Rubaya mine, a consequence of unregulated greed, not diplomacy.

This article has been produced as part of The Independent’s Rethinking Global Aid project

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