Dilemma as Bralima boosts eastern Conge
Transcription
Dilemma as Bralima boosts eastern Conge
The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 BEER BONANZA: REBELS LEVYING TAX' OF $1M A YEAR Dilemma as Bralima boosts eastern Conge A JOINT REPORT It's a June night in Kinshasa, and rapper JB Mpiana's even in places where a differ ing international peacebuild flag. Bralima — as the company ent rebel group takes over the radio station practically each month. "There are many ad vantages to being with Brali ma," JB said. "They have reach ing community — including NGOs, the United Nations, de velopment consortiums, think was now called, for Brasseries, weekly VIP bash is just start ing to heat up. A minute before midnight, JB runs onstage among a huge posse of gyrat ing dancers in sunglasses. He all over the country." Of course, in the DRC, "all rips into some of his biggest over the country' includes hits. Most songs deal with the some of the most dangerous usual material, girls and gang places on Earth. The author bangers, in the Democratic Re ity of the national government public of the Congo's Lingala in Kinshasa does not extend to language. But when JB starts all of eastern Congo, which is to chant the lyrics of his big largely run by a rogues' gallery gest hit of the night, the real of rebel groups, including the purpose of this party — fes notorious M23, whose list of tooned with yellowandblue alleged crimes against human banners advertising Primus, ity includes looting, murder, the beer that everyone would and rape. Congo's civil wars have been be drinking anyway, even at this lush downtown wine bar fuelled by everything from — becomes obvious, "I love my Priiimus!" JB blood diamonds to conflict col tan extracted from the coun yells. The crowd yells back: "I try's abundant mines, which makes operating any sort of love my beer!" After the show, we asked JB business in the east a mor ally dubious proposition. But that has not stopped Heineken with Bralima, the Heineken subsidiary that brews and and many other foreign firms, about his lucrative contract distributes Primus. In return which see themselves as the country's best hope for post for writing numerous odes to war reconstruction. Primus and featuring its trade Corporations from the East mark yellowandblue trucks in India Company to United Fruit his videos, JB gets invaluable did shady business in conflict national exposure — and some zones for decades, inviting the $300,000 a year. wrath of diplomats and inter The dream contract for any celebrity in the DRC is with national watchdogs who ac Bralima — better than any cused them of warprofiteering. tanks, and some developed world governments — started taking a different tack. ping 550 million litres of beer in 1974. Monumental challenges These days, an emphasis The current government, on economic opening and under President Joseph Ka corporate social responsibil world's most powerful organi bila, has faced monumental challenges, from entrenched corruption and nonexistent in sations are actively encourag ing corporations into conflict both within and around the markets, hoping this will lead to peace. Sometimes, though, when Brahma's yellowand country. Bigger than the US Midwest, the DRC holds some 70 million people. But, by some blue trucks hit those dusty Congo roads, the results can be messy. In 1923, a group of European estimates, nearly 10 per cent of its population has died as a re ity means that many of the investors founded one of Afri frastructure to raging conflict sult of a series of fratricidal civ il wars that began in 1996. ca's first breweries, naming it Brasserie de Leopoldville after Belgian Congo's colonialera capital. Primus, its inaugural Last year's mutiny by the M23 rebel group in the eastern city of Goma, as well as the on going violence since then, has displaced thousands and killed brew, did not fare particularly hundreds. Rebel offshoots are well, with drinkers preferring now stockpiling weapons for a potential showdown with the world's largest UN peace keepiug force, which has been in the country since 1999 but has just been given an unprec bettertasting and cheaper Dutch and German beers until the 1950s, when the company — in which the Netherlands based Heineken purchased a minority stake in the 1930s — began expanding production. Over time, Primus became Bralima's marquee beer and a source of national pride. Following Congo's independ edented mandate to take offen sive action against the rebels. Heineken, which bought out Bralima in 1982, has main tained its investment in the DRC throughout the turmoil, ence from Belgium in 1960, Kinshasabased record compa By the end of the 20th century, Primus played a central role ny, it can guarantee its stars se however, the rapidly grow in the new country, even bas cure, stable careers and fame, Limonaderies et Malteries Africaines — brewed a whop ing its logo on the national Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 anticipating major shifts in the global spirits trade, as gi ant conglomerates like Bel gium's AnheuserBusch InBev and London's SABMiller have moved away from reliance on stagnant European and Ameri can markets to snap up foreign brands. Heineken doesn't report with Primusbranded tables, chairs, and ashtrays. Hand painted signs for Primus seem to paper every surface in the DRC, many with the slogan "Toujours Leader!" ("Always the Leader,'*) probably much more, accord ing to a 2008 report by the UN Group of Experts on the DRC. The checkpoints are the pri mary revenue source for armed groups in the area and bring in more than enough to fund an Given the volatility of the insurgency in a country where country's politics, remaining the average wage is about a dol the leader in Congo can call lar a day and used AK47s can go for as little as $50, And with profits by country, but Africa for some tricky manoeuvres. and the Middle East accounted But you wouldn't immediately automatic weapons as preva for $873 million in profits and 14.4 per cent of the compa ny's revenue in 2012. Frontier know that from visiting Brali ma's Kinshasa plant, where tall Dutch managers in crisply col lared shirts oversee operations beers like Bralima are emerg ingcountry lottery tickets, chances to buy into a market before the country booms and drinkers develop new, more ex otic brand loyalties. Since tak ing over Bralima, Heineken has acquired major stakes in other national classics like Egypt's Stella, India's Kingfisher, and Mexico's Sol. Under guidance from Am sterdam, Brahma's market share in the DRC has rocketed from 30 per cent in 1987 to 60 per cent today — with Primus as the flagship brand. Bralima's main plant in Kinshasa, one of its six in the country, churns out up to a quartermillion of the footballsized brown, dim pled bottles every day, along side Heineken, CocaCola, Sprite, and Fanta — Bralima is also the country's biggest soda distributor. In addition to its contracts with celebri ties, the brewery has exclusive deals with many bars in Kin shasa, which are festooned from the bird'seyeview walk ways and negotiate employee lent as they are, almost anyone can be a checkpoint "rebel" in the eastern DRC, including lessthanscrupulous police and armed forces trying to sup plement their anaemic wages. M23 is one of the major play contracts at the plant's onsite ers in the blockade racket. watering hole. Sylvain Malanda, Bralima's Formed by those unsatisfied Congolese communications per ca; manager, seemed surprised consult when asked about corruption in the DRC: "We can do some rural A appro* favours and give gifts [to] poli of Bra! ticians if they get in trouble or transp ask us. But no corruption." Mr must p Malanda says the help is mu each y tual: "The government is help our lov ing us a lot. Congo is open for business!" these t enougr In the east, however, with its per jol virtually nonexistent govern blocka. ment presence and horrific ally bad transportation infrastruc few tr; not on ture, it is the rebels who deter mine what stays open. Anyone road a driving through eastern Con Bra!im go quickly becomes familiar paying with the experience of getting year tc stopped at checkpoints and be with a ing asked to pay fees. A single had on checkpoint can bring in more the Rw than $700,000 per year and the Cor ¦»* • Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya which up to greate; North Sancti The tioned cusing and lo eastern to inti. Longt: rebel g curren Crimir war ci The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 > GDP but helps fund rebels' activities 2009 peace deal that ly nominally integrated indabacked Tebels into igolese army, the group, is estimated to have 6,000 members, wants .• autonomy in parts of Kivu province. OtIS United Nations sanc M23 late last year, ac . it of murdering, raping, oting across swathes of a Congo in an attempt mid ate its way to power, ime RwandanCongolese ;eneral Bosco Ntaganda, tly at the International lal Court on charges of imes, rape, and use of child soldiers, is one of the founders. Eastern Congo's levy bosses arent exactly hiding from in ternational retribution. In a surprisingly easytoarrange conversation, we spoke by mo bile phone in July with a taci turn Rwandan calling himself Mr Damien, "tax collector" for M23. Mr Damien said that he splits his time between M23's three primary checkpoints, overseeing operations at the Bunagana, Kibati, and Ki wanja stations. Mr Damien explained that he charges $38 for a van to pass, $300 for a mediumsized goods truck, and $700 for a fuel tanker, handing out officiallooking receipts for payment. The three main checkpoints bring in most of the group's funding, enough money to purchase weapons, pay salaries and bribes, and even occasionally dole out social aid to eastern Congo's poor. Everyone gets stopped, even the Bralima trucks painted like big yellowandblue DRC flags. Mr Damien explained that M23 takes $500 each from the trucks hauling crates of Primus into rebelcontrolled areas: "NGOs pay. People carrying charcoal pay. Women going to the mar ket pay. Everyone pays! We don't do preferential treatment. So, of course, those who transport beer also pay." Drivers leaving Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 for rebel areas are given extra cash to cover the payments, a security officer at one of Brali ma's main distribution depots Congo told us. the time the brown glass tia or cartelcontrolled zones to keep space between themselves and the road. Heineken has de nied that it uses local distribu tors to immunise the company, pointing out that it operated this way for decades before the reach their remote vil rebels occupied the area. But the prices can rise structure has certainly allowed the $1 they cost in thousands of Congolese took to the streets to riot throughout the city. As locals say: "You can bomb a hospital, but not Brali ma!") Beer trafficking would po tentially provide an even more lucrative source of income for rebel groups than the blockades do today. We took Mr Damien's and multiplied them Bralima to keep running in the The international commu east as warlords have come and Bralima had breweries in cit Bralima runs through eastern Congo's rebelheld re nity has placed some checks on companies that do business, ei ther directly or indirectly, with ies under control of the rebel the rebels. US Executive Order group RCDGoma during its gions. Extrapolating from Brali occupation of eastern Congo be tween 1998 and 2003, explained 13413, a 2006 directive, penal ises any American corporation or its subsidiary found "to have materially assisted, sponsored, thousands of trips per gone. ma's DRC market share and per Jason Stearns, who in 2008 capita rates of beer consump headed the UN Expert Group tion elsewhere in rural Africa, on Congo, conducting a spe we estimate that approximately 16 million bottles of Bralima cial investigation into violence beer, or about 2,000 transport in the country's east. "So the vehicles' worth, must pass choice they would have had at through checkpoints each that point — and that any local year. Assuming, based on businessman had at that point our lowend estimates, that — was to disengage and to leave these trucks are fortunate and stop business, or to contin enough to be stopped on ue," Mr Stearns said. Bralima's decision, along with those of other companies that continued to operate in the re gion, was extensively document M23 but also other road and ed in the Lutundula Report, the ly once per journey at the dozens of blockades along the region's few transport links, manned not only by or provided financial, material, or technological support" to any antigovernment militants oper ating in the DRC. UN Security Council Resolu tion 1493, adopted in 2003, also sanctions assistance to rebel groups in the region. But the sanctions are extremely difficult to enforce, especially given that most companies in eastern Con go work with local partners. Despite all best efforts, in a place like eastern Congo, once a corporation goes in, it can become difficult for anyone river rebel sentries, Bralima Congolese parliament's 2005 as — whether local governments, distributors could be paying sessment of conflict profiteer international observers, or far upward of $1 million a year to ing. Although the widespread flung corporate executives — to rebel groups. When we presented Heineken with our figure this summer, JohnPaul Schuirink, financial communications manager, said payments to rebels are common knowledge, the Congolese gov control exactly what goes there. ernment hasnt followed up the Accarding to Mr Malanda, Lutundula Report with further the situation in the DRC and investigations, and business has proceeded as usual ever since. "It's not just Bralima that con the use of local distributors, the amount and the payments were tinued, but it's every single Con golese company in the country," difficult for Heineken to verify. said Mr Stearns. But Mr Schuirink said that in Given beer's almost mythical status in Congo, shutting down that due to the complexity of response to Foreign Policy's in quiry, the company was in the process of investigating and, as a precaution, had "immediately Bral iria's communications man ager, his bosses back in Amster dam c on't care much about how he ma kes money — so long as it gets made. "For Heineken, what matte:s is our sales goals. If we make them, all is good. If not, big trouble!" said Mr Malanda, laughi ng as he pretended to beat us with an imaginary stick. (Mr Schuirink told us, "We do not recognise, nor condone these staten.ents.'') party distributor invoices in the Bralima in the east, though it could dry up some funds going to M23, would do little beyond driving up prices and encourag ing smuggling. (Last year, a lo area." gistical problem disrupted the Brewe r's headquarters suspended all payment of third Mr Schuirink also noted in an email that "this area repre sents far less than one per cent of our total volume in the DRC and that the vast majority of our deliveries in the area are outside $1 million The amount Bralima distributors could be paying to rebel groups of the territories that are under every year the influence of M23." flow of beer in Goma for just Bralima outsources its dis under two weeks, leading to a tribution to local independent operators, a common way for corporations working in mili 50cent increase per bottle, ac cording to members of Bralima's distribution staff, who said that At Heineken's headquarters in ceni ral Amsterdam, a vaulted house perched across the canal from he firm's original brick breweiy, global communica tions director John Clarke put the company's philosophy in quite c ifferent terms. "There's a view, t belief that you can help the most by being there, being presen;... being a contributor to the loc il economy," he told us. Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 Heineken's approach in the DRC fc Hows a business concept known as corporate social re sponsibility <CSR). Part social investment, part public rela tions campaign, and part com munity integration effort, CSR assumes that if big companies tion, for example, spent more The most recent thinking than hilf a million dollars last about CSR holds that the mere year supporting programmes for prenatal care, sickle cell anaemia clinics, blood banks, Havin? Bralima in eastern presenca of a major corporation in an unstable region is bene^fi Congo, so the theory goes, is a cial. A century of scholarship CSR actvity in itself. However, on the complicated ties between in reality, having Heineken in poverty and violence has argued eastern Congo may boost GDP, that greater economic integra but its p lyments to rebels fuel a tion can help bring peace to cha conflict 1 hat leads the country ai and primary schools. Brali ma's foundation recently spent $90,000 building an orphanage. can ali.ni their selfinterest with Almost all other international the interests of the countries in food and drink conglomerates operating in fragile countries, from Kraft and Mars to Pepsi and Nestle, undertake similar which they're investing, every one benefits. The ieineken Africa Founda outreaca. can leat to a more Utopian fu ture for ocal residents. otic parts of the world. Accord the wror g direction. ing to the World Bank, this sort ByJasot Miklian and of corpcrate opening is "crucial Peer Scfumten for countries coping with and Foreign Policy Magazine emerging from violence" and Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 A beer advert on a billboard in Biikavii, DR Congo. Brali ma is able to produce, market and distribute its beer all over the country. Picture: File Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 You can bomb a hospital, but not Bralima!" Residents of Goma, eastern DR Congo $1M BEER BONANZA PASS CHARGES: M23 takes $500 from each truck hauling crates of Primus into rebel controlled areas. They charge $38 for a van to pass, $300 for a mediumsized goods truck, and $700 for a fuel tanker and hand out officiallooking receipts for payment. The three main checkpoints bring in most of the group's funding, enough money to purchase weapons, pay salaries and bribes, and even occasionally dole out social aid to eastern Congo's poor, OVERALL COSTS: Extrapolating from Bralima's DRC market share and Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya The EastAfrican Date: 22.09.2013 Page 23,26,27 Article size: 2302 cm2 ColumnCM: 511.55 AVE: 767333.33 Ipsos Synovate Kenya Acorn House,97 James Gichuru Road Lavington Nairobi Kenya