BAMAKO, Mali
Authorities in Mali have
arrested four senior employees of a Canadian mining company as the military
regime in the West African nation continues to detain workers to pressure
companies in its crucial mining sector to pay millions in additional taxes.Malian President Assimi Goïta
Barrick Gold in a statement
Tuesday confirmed that four employees at its Loulo-Gounkoto mining complex had
been charged and awaited trial after their arrests Monday evening.
The company said it rejects
the charges but did not say what they were. Malian authorities refused to
comment on the arrests.
The same Barrick Gold
employees also were briefly taken into custody in September. Barrick Gold says
it has been seeking to finalize an agreement that would guide its partnership
with Mali’s government, including the state’s share of the economic benefits
generated by the mining site and the “legal framework under which this would be
managed.”
In Tuesday’s statement,
Barrick Gold CEO Mark Bristow said that “attempts to find a mutually acceptable
resolution have so far been unsuccessful, but we remain committed to engage
with the government in order to resolve all the claims levied against the company
and its employees and secure the early release of our unjustly imprisoned
colleagues.”
Earlier this month, the
CEO of Australian company Resolute Mining and two employees were arrested in
Mali’s capital, Bamako. They were released after the company paid $80 million
to Malian authorities to resolve a tax dispute and promised to pay a further
$80 million in the coming months.
Mali is one of Africa’s
leading gold producers, but it has struggled
for years with jihadi violence and high levels of poverty and hunger.
The military seized power in 2020, and the regime has placed foreign mining
companies under growing pressure as it seeks to shore up government revenues.
“Mali is likely to continue to
using detentions, arrests and even charges against mining executives to compel
foreign-owned companies to comply with new regulations and generate short-term
funds,” Beverly Ochieng, an analyst at the Control Risks Group consulting firm,
told The Associated Press.
“These regulations are
currently being applied retroactively, which is likely to increase regulatory
disputes and make the mining sector challenging and unpredictable for Western
companies,” Ochieng added.
Last year, Mali’s military
authorities carried out an audit of the mining sector before drawing up a new
mining code this year. In August, authorities set up a commission to negotiate
with mining companies over what the government says they owe according to the
audit.
Ochieng said the government’s
audit has not been transparent and the new mining code gives Mali’s authorities
a greater share.
Earlier this year, Canadian
mining companies B2Gold and Allied Gold accepted the demands, making payments
to authorities and agreeing to the new mining code.
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