رجوع
Oct 26, 2025

Congolese Instability Keeps ‘Do Not Travel’ Status; Mining Firms Reroute Staff

Congolese Instability Keeps ‘Do Not Travel’ Status; Mining Firms Reroute Staff
On 26 October 2025 DFAT maintained its blanket ‘Do Not Travel’ advisory for the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), citing conflict, terrorism and kidnapping. The warning is driving a reshuffle of Australian mining engineers and geologists who often transit Johannesburg en route to DRC copper and cobalt concessions.

Several Perth-based resources companies told GMN they have diverted technical teams to Rwanda and Zambia, relying on remote-sensor data and drone surveys to minimise physical presence inside DRC. The pivot underscores the growing role of virtual mobility—but also the limitations, as regulatory filings still require on-site environmental audits.

Insurance markets have hardened: war-risk premiums for charter flights into Lubumbashi have risen 40 % since July. Mobility budgets must account for crisis-response retainers and kidnap-and-ransom cover if on-ground visits are unavoidable.

DFAT emphasises health as well as security: Ebola, cholera and Mpox outbreaks continue. Staff granted rare waivers to enter must complete a stringent vaccination and prophylaxis schedule.

With global battery supply chains hungry for cobalt, risk managers face a delicate balance between opportunity and duty of care. The latest advisory tilts the scales further toward remote-first operational models.
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