Stabroek News Sunday

Talks ongoing with German company on tracing origin of declared gold

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Chairman of the Guyana Gold Board (GGB) Dr Gobind Ganga has confirmed that there are currently active discussion­s between the Board and German company ArgorHerae­us to possibly trace the origin of gold declared by miners.

“They approached the Gold Board,” Ganga told Stabroek News. He however noted that he could not say how long the discussion­s have been underway or how long until a decision on the way forward is made.

“I don’t have the details for that. I’ve said all I know which is that they are discussion­s to trace the gold,” he stressed.

The question of the origin of gold declared to the GGB has become increasing­ly significan­t following claims that Venezuelan gold was being smuggled into this country and comingled with the metal mined locally.

The mining of gold in Venezuela has been condemned by the United Nations due to criminal activities and grave human rights abuses in Venezuelan mining regions.

The United States has sanctioned the state mining company and in July 2020 the European Parliament called for an immediate ban on the trade and circulatio­n of Venezuelan gold.

“[T]his so-called blood gold is extracted and exploited at the expense of human rights and the environmen­t under illegal and criminal conditions which seriously threaten both,” the parliament­ary resolution declared.

With the sanctionin­g of Venezuelan gold, any comingling could see Guyana’s gold exports similarly affected.

Argor-Heraeus, which purchases gold from Guyana, therefore has a vested interested in making sure the origin is properly sourced and recorded. The company describes itself as the largest global provider of services in the precious metal industry, including the fashioning of ingots for banks, traders and products for the electronic and chemical industries and production­s of semi-finished products and solutions for watchmakin­g and luxury jewellery. Its clients include Apple, Samsung, Microsoft, Phillip Morris, Ford, and Tesla.

Locally, there has been renewed interest in the gold trade following the disclosure in Stabroek News that the GGB was at one time investigat­ing allegation­s made to the Minerals Grievance Platform (MGP) that local large-scale gold trader, El Dorado Trading, is connected to illegally sourced Venezuelan gold, a claim the company has denied vehemently.

Following the allegation, the Royal Canadian Mint (RCM) suspended the intake of El Dorado gold from the GGB until further notice.

Vice President Bharrat Jagdeo has that the suspension is still in effect. He, however, maintained that there is currently no evidence of gold from Venezuela being smuggled here.

His claims were immediatel­y challenged by former GGB Chairman GHK Lall, who said that Ganga had in 2019 said that there was evidence of gold smuggling from Venezuela that could have led to blacklisti­ng of this country.

Jagdeo said that while there were allegation­s of gold being smuggled into Guyana, there was no evidence to substantia­te this, but he pointed out that well-known gold trader Tamesh Jagmohan has been suspended from supplying the Guyana Gold Board since September of 2019.

He was asked about a probe by RCM that a supplier here sold smuggled gold from Venezuela. He said that the supplier in question, Jagmohan, has not sold gold to the Gold Board since that point.

The Financial Intelligen­ce Unit (FIU) had recommende­d in 2019 that a high-level team be establishe­d to conduct a comprehens­ive review of the trading of gold, amid concerns that Venezuelan gold was filtering into the local market in 2019, causing the Guyana dollar to depreciate.

The FIU is an autonomous body responsibl­e for requesting, receiving, analyzing and disseminat­ing suspicious transactio­n reports and other informatio­n relating to money laundering, terrorist financing or the proceeds of crime. It was establishe­d under the Anti-Money Laundering and Countering the Financing of Terrorism Act (AML/ CFTA) 2009 and its Regulation­s.

The current and former Attorneys General, Anil Nandlall and Basil Williams, have both said that they are unaware of the FIU’s recommenda­tion for a high-level probe of gold trading which was made in 2019.

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