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The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in a unanimous opinion upheld the arguments of the tech giants that the companies only maintained a commercial relationship with their suppliers
A US court recently absolved five major technology companies accused of aiding the use of child labour in cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
In the case filed by former child miners and their representatives, Google parent company Alphabet, Apple, Dell Technologies, Microsoft and Tesla stood accused of facilitating child labour in their supply chains for cobalt.
Cobalt is used to make lithium-ion batteries that are widely used in electronics. The U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia in a unanimous opinion upheld the arguments of the tech giants that the companies only maintained a commercial relationship with their suppliers. The court further held that they had no power to stop the use of child labour.
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The plaintiffs said that the companies were aware of the use of child labour in cobalt mines but did not act for fear of disrupting the supply of the metal. Congo is the world’s biggest producer of cobalt. A lot of the metal is extracted by artisanal miners who employ child labour and where safety is not observed. More than 40, 000 children are working in hazardous conditions in cobalt mines in the Katanga province alone, according to the UN