In Nigeria's lithium boom, many mines are illegal and children do much
of the work
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[December 12, 2024] By
TAIWO ADEBAYO
NASARAWA, Nigeria (AP) — Dressed in a faded pink dress, 6-year-old
Juliet Samaniya squats under scorching skies to chip at a jagged white
rock with a stone tool. Dust coats her tiny hands and her hair as she
works hour after hour for less than a dollar a day. The landscape around
her is dotted with active and abandoned mineshafts, farmland that may
soon be cleared in search of more rich ore, and other mine workers —
many of them children.
Juliet should be in school, her mother, Abigail Samaniya, admits.
Instead, she spends her day mining lithium, a mineral critical for
batteries needed in the global transition to clean energy, to earn money
that helps sustain her family.
“That is the only option,” Abigail Samaniya said.
The International Labour Organization estimates more than 1 million
children work in mines and quarries worldwide, a problem particularly
acute in Africa, where poverty, limited access to education and weak
regulations add to the problem. Children, working mostly in small-scale
mines, work long hours at unsafe sites, crushing or sorting rocks,
carrying heavy loads of ore, and exposing themselves to toxic dust that
can cause respiratory problems and asthma.
The growing demand for lithium has created a new frontier for mining in
mineral-rich Nigeria. But it has come with a steep cost, exploiting its
poorest and most vulnerable: its children. Their work often provides
material for Chinese businesses that dominate Nigeria’s laxly regulated
extractive industry and are often blamed for illegal mining and labor
exploitation.
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The Associated Press recently traveled to the deep bush of Pasali, near
the federal capital of Abuja in Nasarawa state, to follow and interview
miners operating illegal mines, including the one where Juliet works. AP
also witnessed negotiations and an agreement to purchase lithium by a
Chinese company with no questions about the source of the lithium or how
it was obtained.
That company, RSIN Nigeria Limited, did not respond to repeated requests
for comment. But in a statement to AP, the Chinese embassy in Abuja said
Chinese mining companies in Nigeria “operate in line with local laws and
regulations.”
Nigeria has laws requiring basic education and prohibiting child labor,
but enforcement is a challenge with many illegal mines in hard-to-reach
areas. Corruption among regulatory and law enforcement officials is also
a problem. The government said it's pursuing reforms that would toughen
laws. Earlier this year it also launched a “corps of mining marshals” to
combat illegal mining, but activists say it's too soon to tell if that
program is helping.
How Nigeria's illegal mines work
Lithium mining began in Pasali a decade ago, transforming a remote and
slumbering community into a bustling site for small-scale illegal
mining, said Shedrack Bala, a 25-year-old who began working in the mines
at age 15 and now owns his own pit. Dozens of mines now dot the area,
all unlicensed.
The mining methods are primitive and dangerous. Miners use chisels and
heavy hammers to break through rocks, descending several feet into dark
pits. In some old but still viable mines, they crawl through narrow
passages snaking between unstable mud walls before starting to dig. For
new mines, the ground is blasted open with dynamite.
Bashir Rabiu, now 19, started in these pits as an underage worker. AP
journalists watched as he wriggled around at the bottom of a pit, where
miners can be at risk if dynamite explodes prematurely. They also face
danger of suffocating in narrow tunnels that connect pits, or burial
from wall collapse — all fates Rabiu has seen befall other miners.
“But it is God that protects,” he said.
Rabiu hauled up raw lithium ore and passed it to Juliet and five other
children, all younger than 10. Wearing rubber slippers and dust-stained
shorts and shirts, the children hunched over heaps of rubble and chipped
away with crude stone tools to extract valuable fragments. Once sorted,
the minerals were bagged to begin their journey from Pasali to the
global supply chain.
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A team of six children can sort and bag up to 10 25-kilogram bags of
lithium-rich rock a day. When the AP visited, they did 22 kilograms
(about 48.5 pounds) in one hour. For working from early morning to late
evening, the children typically share 4,000 naira (about $2.42),
according to Bala and others who use them. They said it is enough money
to cover meals at the children’s homes.
In Juliet's group, only she and a 5-year-old boy named Zakaria Danladi
had ever attended the local elementary school. Zakaria stopped when he
was orphaned. Juliet was pulled out because her family couldn't afford
to send both her and her 11-year-old brother, and his education took
precedence, her mother said.
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Juliet Samaniya, 6, chips at a rock with a stone tool at an illegal
lithium mining site in Paseli, Nigeria, Tuesday, Nov 5, 2024. (AP
Photo/Sunday Alamba)
 Basic education is supposed to be
free in Nigeria, at least in government schools like the one in
Pasali. But hidden fees often put it out of reach of the poorest
families. For example, in Pasali, a Parent-Teacher Association levy
of 5,000 Naira (about $3) is charged per term, parents said. For
Juliet’s family and others, even this amount is too much. About 63%
of Nigeria's population lives in poverty.
Sule Dantini, the schoolmaster, said his classes have become
virtually empty with only three pupils turning up when he spoke with
AP in early December. “I used to have up to 300 pupils, but
attendance has been very poor because of mining.” He denied the
school charges fees.
Miners say they have no trouble finding buyers
Nigeria is Africa’s top oil producer, but it also has deep mineral
resources including granite, limestone, and gold, and it's seeking
to tap those to reduce its reliance on petroleum exports. Yet much
of this wealth — including lithium — is siphoned off through
unlicensed mines that cost the nation billions of dollars and drive
insecurity, according to a parliamentary probe this year.
The illegal mining thrives on informal networks of buyers and
sellers who operate without much fear of the government. Aliyu
Ibrahim, a lithium merchant in Nasarawa, owns unlicensed mines and
also buys lithium ore from other illegal sites. At his warehouse, he
told AP that his business flourishes by paying officials to look the
other way. Ibrahim said he then sells his lithium in bulk to Chinese
companies.
Ibrahim said he knows that children are working at his mines and
others he buys from, but he said many of the children are orphans or
poor.
“It is dangerous, but the work helps them survive, while the
government has abandoned poor people," he said.
Some of the bush miners avoid middlemen like Ibrahim and sell
directly to Chinese companies or Chinese nationals.
AP accompanied miners from Pasali illegal mines to Chinese-owned
RSIN Nigeria Limited, where a sales agreement was reached without
questions about the source of the minerals or the conditions under
which they were extracted. Sellers were asked to leave samples to
test for lithium content. A price list from the buyers offered
200,000 naira (about $119) for a metric ton of minerals containing
up to 3% lithium.
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China's citizens and companies are frequently in the spotlight for
environmentally damaging practices, exploitative labor and illicit
mining in several countries. Nigeria has seen multiple cases of
illegal mining arrests and prosecutions involving Chinese nationals
in recent months. Experts say the materials are exported in a
variety of ways, including shipping with false documentation or
concealment within legitimate shipments.
The Chinese embassy's statement to AP said its government has a
zero-tolerance policy toward any illegal mining activity or illegal
labor by Chinese companies operating abroad.
Philip Jakpor, a Nigerian activist, said his nonprofit Renevlyn
Development Initiative has documented widespread child labor
practices across Nasarawa state.
“Revenue generation seems to have trumped the need to protect human
rights,” Jakpor said. “We expect those operating in the upper
spheres of the supply chain to adopt responsible models that prevent
abusive conditions in mineral extraction.”
Juliane Kippenberg, associate director of children’s rights at Human
Rights Watch, said global demand for lithium is expected to grow
rapidly in coming years and it's imperative for governments to
protect human rights and press corporations to do the same.
Segun Tomori, a spokesperson for the Ministry of Mining and Solid
Minerals Development, said ongoing reforms such as amending the
Minerals and Mining Act are aimed at minimizing the use of child
labor. Tomori also said social safety programs such as school
feeding initiatives are being revamped to keep children in school
and combat child labor. He also cited the program to add mining
marshals announced this year to clamp down on illegal mining.
Abigail Samaniya, 6-year-old Juliet's mother, said she hopes her
daughter will someday escape the mine.
“I still want her to go to school, have a better life, work in an
office, not a mine forever," she said.
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