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ZIMBABWE:
Caution urged in plan to grab mining assets
IRIN
News
March 07, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=52073
JOHANNESBURG
- Mining company Implats says the Zimbabwe government's plan to
take a 51 percent controlling interest in mining operations in the
country "is not in the best interests of developing the platinum
industry in Zimbabwe".
Newspapers in
South Africa and Zimbabwe have devoted many column inches to the
news that the government planned to become the majority shareholder
in the country's estimated US $20 billion mining sector.
According to
South Africa's Business Day, Zimbabwean Minister of Mines Amos Midzi
told the Zimbabwe Chamber of Mines last week that the cabinet had
approved draft proposals requiring mining companies to surrender
51 percent of their assets to the government and/or indigenous groups,
depending on the commodity. The government would pay only for 26
percent and the remainder would be a "free carry".
Midzi reportedly
warned that alternative foreign investors had been identified to
take over equity in mines if the current external shareholders did
not co-operate.
South African
mining house Implats, which has significant interests in Zimbabwe's
platinum mining sector, told IRIN that the company was aware of
the plan but a company spokesman would not expand on a statement
issued on Sunday that Implats was "in receipt of a cabinet-approved
draft proposal relating to ownership of the Zimbabwean platinum
industry" and that Implats believed the proposal was "not
in the best interests" of the platinum industry.
The government's
scheme was also "inconsistent with previous discussions [the
company has had] with the Zimbabwean government", Implats added.
"The company
will actively engage with and seek further clarity from the Zimbabwean
government on the proposal, and remains hopeful that a solution
will be found in the best interests of Zimbabwe and the companies
invested there," Implats noted.
Zimbabwean economist
Dennis Nikisi said the government's strategy was in line with similar
developments in countries such as Namibia, Botswana and South Africa,
where the authorities have moved to ensure their countries reap
greater rewards from the extraction of natural resources.
But, he cautioned,
the difference between enhancing equity and sabotaging an already
weakened economy lay in how the proposed plan was executed. The
rationale behind the government's proposal was "basically that
all the mineral resources in the country belong to Zimbabwe and
Zimbabweans".
"Many of
the corporations that are extracting these mineral resources in
Zimbabwe have been doing so independently, without any shares owned
by the government or indigenous individuals. As such, it is improper
that the local people - either through themselves or the government
- should not directly benefit from the extraction of these minerals,"
Nikisi explained.
The proposal
was thus intended to ensure that Zimbabwe "benefits from its
own resources".
The "free
carry" part of the scheme was based on the belief that the
government would warehouse those shares for eventual purchase by
indigenous groups.
But, he cautioned,
"we must be very careful - already Zimbabwe is perceived as
a lawless country, and as people who do not respect international
agreements."
Taking a fast-track
land restitution approach to reforming the ownership structure of
the mining sector could mirror the effects of farm invasions on
agriculture.
"This [mining
sector reform] must be executed in a manner that is beneficial to
mining companies as well as government, particularly at this delicate
stage where we want to be perceived as willing to be part and parcel
of the global community," Nikisi said.
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