Editor’s Note
This report, published by Dominic Raab in partnership with the World Gold Council, investigates the severe human rights and environmental abuses linked to illicit gold from artisanal mining. It underscores the urgent need for coordinated global action to address these pervasive atrocities within supply chains.
The Rt. Hon Dominic Raab, in partnership with the World Gold Council, today publishes a new report examining the systemic threats from the illicit trade of gold through artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM).
The “Silence is Golden” report finds the ASGM industry, responsible for an estimated 20% of annual gold supply and about 80% of gold mining employment, is being targeted by criminal gangs, armed groups and corrupt officials, presenting a real and present danger to international security.
The report notes the top fundamental challenges that plague ASGM are:
- The lack of transparency across businesses and governments for implementation and compliance with legal standards.
- Failures of accountability creating serious breaches of national law and international obligations, allowing criminals to operate freely.
- Criminals extracting enormous profits from serious human rights abuses, due to disconnected enforcement and compliance efforts across nations and international agencies.
In response, it outlines four strategic objectives with 24 practical actions for governments, international organisations, NGOs, mining companies and economic development organisations. These include prosecuting and disrupting criminal perpetrators and sustaining a coordinated and focused international effort across G7 and G20 countries to tackle these pervasive issues.
ASGM, as defined in the report, is gold mining conducted by individuals or small enterprises with limited capital investment and production. While this practice spans 80 countries, it is particularly focused in Africa, Asia and Latin America. The majority of ASGM operates outside of formal legal frameworks, within the shadow economy, making it especially susceptible to serious risks and challenges including evasion of tax revenue for governments, lack of basic safety standards that can cause mercury poisoning and other maladies, and safety concerns for the miners and their communities.
Please note these statistics are estimated and sourced from ‘Global Trends in Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining, A Review of Key Numbers and Issues’, Intergovernmental Forum on Mining, Minerals, Metals and Sustainable Development, 2017.