Date: 27 November 2024 , 02:01
News ID: 11515

Four Barrick Gold employees detained in Mali

me-metals: Four employees from Barrick Gold’s (NYSE: GOLD) (TSX: ABX) Loulo-Gounkoto mining complex have been detained in Mali as the military-led government intensifies efforts to impose additional taxes on mining companies.

According to me-metals cited from mining.com, Discussions between Barrick and Malian authorities on implementing new regulations at Loulo-Gounkoto — one of the African nation’s largest gold mines — have been ongoing for months.

Sources cited by Reuters reported that Mali is seeking around $500 million in unpaid taxes from Barrick as the government aims to increase revenue from the mining sector.

“While Barrick refutes these charges, it said it would continue to engage with the Malian government to find an amicable dispute settlement that would ensure the long-term sustainability of the complex,” the company said in a press release.

Barrick CEO Mark Bristow said that since September 30, the company had been actively seeking to finalize a Memorandum of Agreement that would guide Barrick’s partnership with the government in future, including “the state’s share of the economic benefits generated by the complex” and “the legal framework under which this would be managed,”

“Our 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,” he said.

Four Barrick employees had been arrested in October already.

Last week, Resolute Mining Ltd. CEO Terry Holohan and two other employees were released from detention in Mali, just days after the gold mining company agreed to pay about $160 million to resolve a tax dispute with the government.

Mali is one of Africa’s top gold producers, and the detention of foreign officials is becoming a pattern as the government seeks to extract more income from the sector.

The country has been under military rule since 2020, when interim leader Colonel Assimi Goita ousted the West African nation’s elected president, citing the previous regime’s failure to repel the Islamist insurgents.

Since then, mercenaries from the Kremlin-backed Wagner Group have been deployed to the country, while European forces and a United Nations peacekeeping mission were forced to withdraw.

Hit by sanctions and cut off from Western aid, authorities have pursued both Resolute and Barrick Gold for allegedly unpaid taxes. 

Shares of Barrick fell 0.7% by 12:10 p.m. EDT. The miner has a market capitalization of C$42.89 billion ($30.46 billion).

source: mining.com