Ottawa Citizen

Barrick settles Tanzania dispute over taxes

- NUZULACK DAUSEN

DAR ES SALAAM Barrick Gold Corp. said it had reached a deal to settle a long-running tax dispute between Tanzania and mining group Acacia, which Barrick bought in a US$1.2-billion transactio­n approved by a British court last month.

The tax deal includes the payment of US$300 million to settle outstandin­g tax and other disputes, the lifting of a concentrat­e export ban, and the sharing of future economic benefits from mines on a 50-50 basis, Barrick said in a statement on Sunday.

“Barrick is definitely back in Tanzania,” Barrick president and chief executive Mark Bristow told reporters in Dar es Salaam, Tanzania’s commercial capital on Sunday.

“A true partnershi­p can only be described when you have 50-50 and our joint venture with the government of Tanzania is exactly that — a committed partnershi­p to develop

Tanzania’s gold assets for the benefit of all stakeholde­rs.”

A new operating company named Twiga Minerals will be formed to manage the Bulyanhulu, North Mara and Buzwagi mines after a review by Tanzania’s attorney general, the statement added.

Under the agreement, the Tanzanian government will also buy a 16-per-cent shareholdi­ng in each of the mines.

“This company has been registered in Tanzania and it will be headquarte­red in Mwanza, Tanzania,” Palamagamb­a Kabudi, Tanzania’s foreign minister said.

Shares of Toronto-based Barrick were down 2.61 per cent on Monday to $21.99 at the close in Toronto.

Kabudi, speaking at the news conference, said the deal marked a new partnershi­p with Barrick under the new Twiga Minerals name.

“Twiga will make our new partnershi­p an example to other mining ventures who are investing in Tanzania and who want to invest in Tanzania.”

He said details of the deal would be submitted to the country’s attorney general for review and he expected that to be completed by Nov. 15.

An Africa-focused internatio­nal dispute resolution framework will also be establishe­d as part of the agreement, Barrick said.

Reuters

Twiga will make our new partnershi­p an example to other mining ventures who are investing in Tanzania.

 ?? EMMANUEL HERMAN/REUTERS ?? Barrick CEO Mark Bristow praises a deal with Tanzania that includes paying US$300 million to settle outstandin­g tax and other disputes and a joint venture with the African country’s government to develop its gold assets through a new firm named Twiga Minerals.
EMMANUEL HERMAN/REUTERS Barrick CEO Mark Bristow praises a deal with Tanzania that includes paying US$300 million to settle outstandin­g tax and other disputes and a joint venture with the African country’s government to develop its gold assets through a new firm named Twiga Minerals.

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