Apple, Microsoft, And Google Sued For Child Labor Deaths In Cobalt Mines
Karamchand Rameshwar
Some of world's largest tech companies are embroiled in a new lawsuit involving the deliberate profiteering of child labor in toxic cobalt mines in Africa.
- Google's Project Toscana: Elevating Pixel Face Unlock to Rival Apple's Face ID
- Best Gaming Phones 2025: Top Devices for Mobile Gaming
- Google Offers Voluntary Buyouts to US Employees Amid AI Push
The case was filed in Washington court this week and the plaintiff is NGO International Rights Advocates (IRA). The organization wants Apple, Dell, Microsoft, Tesla, and Alphabet to pay compensation for benefiting from the children working in toxic cobalt mines in Africa.
Cobalt is an essential component in lithium-ion batteries, which is an important component to power a mobile device. However, the continuous increase in smartphone production in the past 20 years has increased the demand for cobalt. Not to mention the emergence of electric vehicles will certainly make demands for cobalt mining increase dramatically.
In the lawsuit, the IRA said the above technology companies are aiding and abetting with the illegal use of child labor in cobalt mines in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The IRA represents 13 petitioners who remain anonymous. These are all families with children who died or suffered injuries while mining cobalt.
The plaintiffs claim that it was the explosion of cobalt demand that created such a widespread and irresistible cobalt mining by children. Hundreds of children in Congo have been forced to live in a toxic, poor working environment with rudimentary working tools. Especially, they only receive 2 USD / day for mining and cobalt mining, which is equivalent to around 142 rupees.
In response to the allegations, many of those technology companies have shown their strong commitments on this matter.
For example, Apple has confirmed its commitment to always be responsible for its material sources. Apple said the company removed six cobalt suppliers from its supply chain because it did not meet Apple's safety standards.
Meanwhile, Dell said that the allegations are still being seriously investigated and reviewed. In particular, the company never purposely asks partners to use child labor.
On the side of Alphabet, Google's parent company also emphasized the importance of protecting children. A Google representative said that bringing children into hazardous working environments is not acceptable and their supplier code of conduct prohibits this activity.
Featured Stories
ICT News - Mar 05, 2026
X Platform Implements Strict Measures Against Fake AI-Generated Videos Amid Iran...
How To - Mar 04, 2026
Getting Started with AI: A Newbie's Simple Guide
ICT News - Mar 03, 2026
Budget Entry-Level PCs Under $500 to Vanish by 2028 Due to Memory Price Surge
ICT News - Mar 02, 2026
IDC Report Predicts Surging Smartphone Prices Due to Global RAM Shortage
ICT News - Mar 01, 2026
Samsung Links Galaxy S26 Price Hikes to AI Memory Supply Issues
ICT News - Feb 28, 2026
Anthropic Blacklisted by US Department of War: Trump Orders Federal Ban Over AI...
ICT News - Feb 26, 2026
AI Models Frequently Resort to Nuclear Escalation in Simulated Crises, Study...
ICT News - Feb 23, 2026
It's Over for Xbox: Asha Sharma Takes Over to Ruin Microsoft Gaming with AI
ICT News - Feb 22, 2026
Which AI Model Excels at Which Task in 2026: A Comprehensive Guide
ICT News - Feb 21, 2026
AI Coding Agent Causes Major AWS Outage at Amazon
Read More
Mobile- Mar 08, 2026
Transforming Android: New Desktop Mode Makes Phones PC-Capable
This update marks an exciting era for Android, empowering users to do more with their everyday devices.
Gadgets- Mar 08, 2026
Best Budget Keyboards of 2026
These budget keyboards prove that you don't need to spend hundreds for a quality typing experience in 2026.