Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 September 2013
This opinion note explores some aspects of the relationship between humanitarian non-governmental organisations (NGOs) and extractive industries. Médecins sans Frontières (Doctors without Borders, MSF) has endorsed a policy of non-engagement with the corporate sector of the extractive industries, particularly when it comes to financial donations. This is coherent with MSF being first and foremost a medical organisation, and one that adheres to the humanitarian principles of independence and neutrality. For humanitarian actors, the prospect of future environmental disasters and environmental conflicts calls for the anticipation of novel encounters, not only with environmental organisations but also with the extractive sector. Unlike environmental organisations, extractive industries are prone to generating or perpetuating different forms of violence, often putting extractive companies on a par with the parties to armed conflicts. In situations where a dialogue with extractive companies would be needed to optimise care and access to victims, humanitarian organisations should carefully weigh pragmatic considerations against the risk of being co-opted as medical providers of mitigation measures.
1 See Fischer-Kowalski, Marina et al. , Decoupling Natural Resource Use and Environmental Impacts from Economic Growth, report of the Working Group on Decoupling to the International Resource Panel, Nairobi, United Nations Environment Programme, 2011Google Scholar, Figure 2.1 and pp. 10–11, available at: www.unep.org/resourcepanel/decoupling/files/pdf/decoupling_report_english.pdf. All internet references were accessed in 2013 unless otherwise stated.
2 See, for example, Michelle Faul, ‘Africa's oldest park threatened by rebels, now oil’, in The Guardian, 5 October 2012, available at: www.guardian.co.uk/world/feedarticle/10470121/print.
3 See, for example, Romero, Simon, ‘Brazil expands mines to drive future, but cost is a treasured link to its past’, in New York Times, 15 December 2012Google Scholar, available at: www.nytimes.com/2012/12/16/world/americas/in-brazil-caves-would-be-lost-in-mining-project.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0.
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5 For example, artisanal gold mining has been the cause of an ongoing outbreak of lead poisoning in Zamfara State, Nigeria. See Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), Lead Poisoning Crisis in Zamfara State, Northern Nigeria, MSF Briefing Paper, May 2012Google Scholar, available at: www.doctorswithoutborders.org/publications/reports/2012/Lead%20Poisoning%20Crisis%20in%20Zamfara%20State%20Northern%20Nigeria.pdf.
6 In the eastern provinces of the Democratic Republic of Congo, the army and militias control many sites of mineral extraction, including deposits of gold and metals of the tin group. See International Alert, The Role of the Exploitation of Natural Resources in Fuelling and Prolonging Crises in the Eastern DRC, International Alert, London, 2009Google Scholar, available at: www.international-alert.org/sites/default/files/publications/Natural_Resources_Jan_10.pdf.
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14 See Déclaration de Berne, above note 7, p. 315.
15 Catherine Coumans, ‘Whose development? Mining, local resistance and development agendas’, Mining Watch Canada, 29 November 2011, available at: www.miningwatch.ca/article/whose-development-mining-local-resistance-and-development-agendas.
16 See, for example, Rick Westerhead, ‘Donors closing wallets to Canadian charities who work with CIDA, mining companies’, in Toronto Star, 31 January 2013, available at: www.thestar.com/news/world/2013/01/31/donors_closing_wallets_to_canadian_charities_who_work_with_cida_mining_companies.html.
17 MSF, ‘Corporate Fundraising Statement’, internal document, October 2010.
18 Jean Saslawsky, ‘Financing humanitarian aid’, XIV Humanitarian Congress Berlin, 12 October 2012, available at: http://humanitarian-congress-berlin.org/files/8013/5064/5592/Jean_Saslawsky_-_Financing_Humanitarian_Aid__12_Oct_2012.pdf.
19 See P. Calain, above note 9.
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33 United Nations Organization Mission in the Democratic Republic of Congo, Report on the Conclusions of the Special Investigation into Allegations of Summary Executions and Other Violations of Human Rights Committed by the FARDC in Kilwa (Province of Katanga) on 15 October 2004, MONUC Kinshasa, September 2005, pp. 8–10Google Scholar, available at: http://raid-uk.org/docs/Kilwa_Trial/MONUC_report_oct05_eng_translated_by_RAID.pdf. See also Global Witness, No Justice in Canada for Congolese Massacre Victims as Canada's Supreme Court Dismisses Leave to Appeal in Case against Anvil Mining, 1 November 2012, available at: www.globalwitness.org/library/no-justice-canada-congolese-massacre-victims-canada%E2%80%99s-supreme-court-dismisses-leave-appeal.
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37 Neutrality is not mentioned in the Geneva Conventions. See K. Mackintosh, above note 26, p. 8.
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