EXCLUSIVE

Mali shuts Canadian gold miner's office over ‘non-payment of taxes’

Closure escalates tensions between company and government

Canadian miner Barrick Gold's office in Mali's capital Bamako has been shut by authorities over the alleged non-payment of taxes, two sources told Reuters. File photo.
Canadian miner Barrick Gold's office in Mali's capital Bamako has been shut by authorities over the alleged non-payment of taxes, two sources told Reuters. File photo.
Image: REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

Malian authorities have shut the Canadian miner Barrick Gold's office in the capital Bamako over the alleged non-payment of taxes, two sources close to the matter told Reuters, in the latest escalation in a protracted dispute over mining revenues.

Barrick confirmed departments within the government this week closed its Bamako office and threatened to place the suspended Loulo-Gounkoto mine under provisional administration unless the mine was reopened and tax payments were made.

The Toronto-based miner and Mali have been in a dispute since 2023 over the implementation of the West African country's new mining code that gives Mali's government a greater share in the gold mine. In February, Reuters reported two former employees of Barrick were driving Mali's hardball talks with the company.

The two sides have been negotiating to resolve the dispute. Reuters reported on February 19 that Barrick had signed an agreement to end it, which awaits approval from the Malian government.

On Tuesday, Barrick said it had signed the agreement presented by the Malian government in February, but the government failed to execute it.

“Its conclusion appears to be obstructed by a small group of individuals placing personal or political interests above the long-term interests of Mali and its people,” the company said.

Barrick said it remained ready to honour the agreement and was prepared to immediately restart production.

Staff in Bamako cannot access the office premises, one said, adding the closure did not affect the Loulo-Gounkoto mining complex in western Mali, where operations have been suspended since mid-January.

One of the sources who spoke about the shutdown of the head office and two other sources said a resolution to the dispute was expected as soon as next week.

The sources all asked not to be identified because of the sensitivity of the issue.

Operations at the Loulo-Gounkoto complex were suspended after the government seized about three metric tons of gold stock from it, accusing the company of not fulfilling its tax obligations. The tax dispute is separate from the one cited for this week's office closure, one source said. Mali's government, which took power after coups in 2020 and 2021, had been blocking the company's gold exports since early November.

Nearly 40 Malian staff from the Loulo-Gounkoto complex are being at least temporarily transferred to Barrick's Kibali mine in the Democratic Republic of Congo, a fifth source said.

The source said the transfers are part of a first wave, but 100 Malian staff in total have been identified for relocation, a sign operations are unlikely to restart soon.


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