For
immediate release
Beny
Steinmetz Group Resources must publicly address questions over Guinea
mining concession
9th November 2012
The Financial
Times has published serious corruption allegations relating to the
confiscation of half of one of the world’s biggest iron ore concessions
and its granting to a company linked to a billionaire mining
entrepreneur.[1] The deal appears to have netted the entrepreneur’s
company, Beny Steinmetz Group Resources (BSGR), a profit of hundreds of
millions, potentially billions, of dollars within the space of a few
months, after it sold just over half of the asset on.
The
allegations referred to by the Financial Times had been put to BSGR and
its joint venture partner, Brazilian mining giant Vale, by a mining
review committee set up by the West African nation of Guinea.[2] The
committee has given them 60 days to respond to the allegations before a
formal hearing takes place on whether to rescind the joint venture’s
mining licences. BSGR has denied any wrongdoing and The Sunday Times has
reported that Beny Steinmetz plans to boycott the committee.[3] Vale
has not commented publicly on the allegations but was cited by the
Financial Times as saying that it “conducts appropriate due diligence
prior to its investments”.
In a statement issued on 7 November
2012, BSGR said that it “contests the legitimacy of the whole process
and will use all available means to protect the rights it legally
acquired in Guinea.”[4]
Given the extreme levels of
poverty in Guinea and the international importance of the mining area in
question – the iron-rich Simandou mountain range – Global Witness
believes full light should be shone on the matter, and is urging BSGR to
fully address the allegations. The company should publicly provide
details about the negotiations surrounding blocks 1 and 2 of the massive
Simandou iron ore concession. Full details should also be provided
about the terms of the deals BSGR struck with successive Guinean
governments and Vale, which is the world’s no. 1 iron-ore producer.
Vale, equally, should publicly answer all relevant questions and explain
what due diligence it did over its Guinea venture.
The
Anglo-Australian miner Rio Tinto had originally acquired exploration
rights to blocks 1, 2, 3 and 4 of Simandou in 1997. It agreed to start
up commercial mining there in 2003[5] and in 2006 the World Bank’s
International Finance Corporation became a 5 per cent shareholder.[6] It
was a much-coveted asset, with Rio Tinto CEO Tom Albanese telling
journalists in 2008 that “Simandou is, without doubt, the top
undeveloped tier-one iron ore asset in the world”.[7]
The
Guinean government, then under the control of long-standing president
Lansana Conté, confiscated the northern half of the mine (blocks 1 and
2) in July 2008. In December that year, less than two weeks before Conté
died, BSGR was awarded exploration rights for the blocks, reportedly
for free.[8] BSGR is a Guernsey-registered company that is managed on
behalf of the family of Beny Steinmetz,[9] who has been listed by
Bloomberg as Israel’s richest man.[10]
A brutal military
junta that took over from Conté reaffirmed BSGR’s rights to the
blocks.[11] Then, in April 2010, BSGR sold on 51 per cent of blocks 1
and 2 for $2.5 billion – more than twice the size of Guinea’s budget for
2010, which amounted to roughly $1.2 billion.[12] Of this total, $500
million was paid to BSGR up-front, with the remainder to be paid in
future instalments.[13] Since the end of 2010, Guinea has been led by
democratically elected president Alpha Condé, who established the
current mining review.
Details of the December 2008
agreement between BSGR and the Guinean government are not publicly
known. If it is true that BSGR paid nothing for the mine, then the $500
million received and the prospect of a further $2 billion represented
immense profits for BSGR -- even if one takes into account a reported
$160 million investment by BSGR into Simandou blocks 1 and 2 and an
additional Guinean mine called Zogota.[14] If Guinea had received Vale’s
payment directly, without passing by BSGR, the country’s economy would
have benefitted immensely.
Among the various questions it
has raised, the mining committee has asked whether BSGR was engaging in
what is referred to as a “flipping” operation – acquiring mining rights
with the sole intention of selling them on. BSGR told the Financial
Times: “This is not about a short-term flip; it is about a long-term
commitment.”
A Guinean government spokesman has confirmed
to the news agency Reuters that it was reviewing BSGR’s contract as part
of a broader review of resource agreements.
“BSGR maintains that it is innocent of any wrongdoing,” the company told the Financial Times, adding:
“This is the latest in an orchestrated campaign being conducted to
undermine BSGR’s position in Guinea in order to enable our assets to be
seized and sold to a variety of interested third parties.”
Global
Witness has received a letter from BSGR’s Chairman, David Clark, saying
that “any allegations of impropriety are without foundation” and that
“unjustified attacks are putting at risk a joint venture worth many
billions of dollars and creating irreparable damage to Guinea and its
people”.
The letter warned that BSGR would “respond with
all available legal means to prevent damaging and defamatory attacks on
our company”. Global Witness has replied to the letter, requesting that
the company provide full details of how it gained access to Blocks 1 and
2 of Simandou.
The Financial Times has said that among
the allegations regarding BSGR is that a representative of the company
“offered then-president Conté a gold watch adorned with diamonds and
that the company agreed to pay the president’s fourth wife a commission
of $2.5m for helping the group secure mining rights in Guinea”. BSGR
denied any knowledge of such a gift to the former president and that it
had paid money to his wife.
An article by Reuters expanded
on the allegations put to BSGR, including that cash was flown into
Guinea on BSGR’s private jet as part of a strategy “to improve its
relations with decision-makers by making regular payments to high
military figures”.[15]
Reuters quoted from the document
sent to BSGR, saying it alleged that the mines minister of Guinea from
2009 to 2010, Mahmoud Thiam, “repeatedly served as a BSGR conduit for
the purposes of these payments, receiving the money on arrival at the
Conakry airport and organising their distribution among the people to
whom they were destined”. Mr Thiam denied the accusations. He has told
Reuters that “every deal we made was carefully crafted towards following
the letter of the mining code”.
Global Witness believes
that the Guinean government should seek redress for any large-scale
corruption that has taken place in relation to the blocks covering
Simandou or any other assets. In future, all of the state's mining
assets should be granted only through open, competitive tenders to
ensure the state benefits as much as possible from its resources. Such a
move would also help avoid further controversies. Global Witness
intends to publish a follow-up statement regarding BSGR’s Guinean
licences once it has had time to discuss further with BSGR and other
relevant companies and officials.
/ Ends
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