Showing posts with label Gold mining. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gold mining. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 28, 2019

Sudan's Gold: Hemedti's untold power - Hilal’s militia made up to $54m pa controlling Jebel Amer goldmine

Article from Zimfocus.net - African Business Magazine
Written by TOM COLLINS
Dated 08 JULY 2019
SUDAN’S GOLD: HEMEDTI’S UNTOLD POWER

The power of Mohamed “Hemedti” Hamdan Dagolo, who has led the violent suppression of demonstrators in Sudan, is based not only on leadership of a militia but also his control of valuable gold resources. Tom Collins reports

After weeks of peaceful sit-ins outside the military headquarters in Khartoum, the uneasy truce between Sudan’s security forces and thousands of protestors demanding change was finally ruptured at dawn on 3 June. Members of the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) – a militia widely condemned for human rights violations in its suppression of rebels in the western province of Darfur – fanned out across the city and proceeded to kill over 100 demonstrators.

A grim warning had been given just days before by Mohamed “Hemedti” Hamdan Dagolo, the leader of the RSF and vice-president of the Transitional Military Council (TMC), the body that has controlled the country since the overthrow of President Omar al-Bashir in April. “My patience has limits,” he said.

Hemedti, along with the head of the army, Abdul Fattah al-Burhan, has emerged as a key figure within the TMC. With a violent past and control of a paramilitary force estimated to number as many as 40,000, many fear that he has set his ambitions on more than simply preventing Sudan’s transition to democracy.

His reported vast personal wealth – accrued from the gold trade, along with outsourcing his militia to the former regime and Saudi Arabia to fight the war in Yemen – under­pins his power.

In 2017, Sudan produced 107 tonnes of gold, making it the third-largest producer on the continent after Ghana and South Africa. Some 70% of output is estimated to be smuggled abroad, although the true size of the illicit trade is hard to quantify. Through his militia, Hemedti controls one of the country’s most lucrative gold mines – Jebel Amer in North Darfur.

By origin a member of the Rezeigat tribe in the Darfur region, Hemedti rose from humble origins as a trader of cloth and camels. In 2003, he joined the Janjaweed, a local militia that was waging a brutal campaign against Darfuri rebels on behalf of the government under the leadership of tribal chief Musa Hilal. The conflict has left 300,000 dead, according to UN estimates.

Through his role in the war, he gained favour with President Bashir, who in 2014 put him in charge of the RSF, which had been formed as an offshoot of the Janjaweed. The group was given the status of a regular force but retained its violent modus operandi, and Bashir began to use it as a bulwark against the strength of Sudan’s military.

“That’s when Hemedti became quite strong,” says Omer Ismail, senior advisor at the Washington-based NGO Enough Project. “Bashir was not confident in the army because the economy was deteriorating rapidly and there were many problems.”

Yet along with a position of almost unparalleled power, Hemedti’s ascendance was accompanied by access to riches. In 2015, a report drawn up for the UN Security Council found that Hilal’s militia was making up to $54m a year from control of the Jebel Amer goldmine. The following year, Hemedti moved against Hilal, who had come into conflict with the government, and seized control of the lucrative mine. Ismail estimates that his earnings may now outstrip those of his former boss.

With this money, the militia kingpin has been able to recruit jobless youths from the across the Sahel to the RSF, resulting in an ever-growing force which Ismail claims is presently “occupying” Sudan: “I would say that Sudan is occupied now because the troops that he is using to control and monopolise power, most of them are not even Sudanese. They are recruited from Chad, Mali and Niger. They are from the Sahel.”

As the RSF continues to sow terror, much of the gold coming from the Jebel Amer mine, which supports a surrounding settlement of around 70,000 people, is exported clandestinely to various international buyers via a shady and complicated web of smuggling activities.

“Almost everything makes its way east to Khartoum,” says Ismail. “From there it is almost exclusively sold to traders in the UAE.”

With very little capacity for smelting and refining gold in Sudan, the metal travels onwards in rough kilogram bricks to countries including Dubai, which act as a gateway for much of Africa’s illicit gold trade.

Comtrade data shows that the UAE imported $15.1bn worth of gold from Africa in 2016, more than any other country and up from $1.3bn in 2006. The share of African gold in the UAE’S gold imports increased from 18% to nearly 50% over the same period and the industry accounts for approximately one fifth of the country’s total GDP.

The substantial offtake of Sudanese gold in Dubai’s markets suggests that economic considerations are part of the UAE’s chequebook diplomacy, which saw a joint $3bn aid package pumped into Khartoum alongside Saudi Arabia.

Hemedti has close links with both Gulf countries as the agent who recruited around 15,000 of his troops to fight the war in Yemen against Houthi-led militia. Ismail speculates that he may receive anywhere between $2,000 to $3,000 a month per person as payment for outsourcing his troops.

Other gold routes, according to Ismail, include the “40-day route” through the desert, historically used to smuggle slaves and ivory to either Tripoli in Libya or Cairo in Egypt. Ismail estimates that the country has around 440 remote airstrips used in the clandestine trade.

“They put the gold in a Land Cruiser and smuggle the gold outside the city of Khartoum,” he explains. “Then one of the smaller companies who have licences to fly out of Sudan will set up a local flight. They will put the gold in the belly of the plane. The gold will then come back through Khartoum airport and onwards to its final destination.”

RUSSIAN INVOLVEMENT
One of these destinations is Russia. Ramping up its presence across Central Africa and the Horn, Moscow has begun gold mining operations in Sudan over the last two years – predominantly in the northeastern region away from Darfur.

Sim Tack, global security analyst for Stratfor, says that the Wagner Group, a Russian private-military outfit with close links to the Kremlin, has been providing security to Russian companies working in the region.

“Russia has become very involved in mineral extraction in Sudan,” he says. “We have seen big accounts of Russia doing this in the Central African Republic (CAR) but at the same time they are doing it in Sudan. Sudan is the entry point into Africa which Russia is using to support its presence in CAR.” 

Data from the Russian central bank cited by Bloomberg show that its gold reserves have nearly quadrupled over the past 10 years, and that 2018 marked the most “ambitious year yet” for Russian gold-buying.

Much of Russia’s activities across Sudan and the CAR are shrouded in secrecy, and the Enough Project’s Ismail believes there is “no way of knowing” how large the trade is.

As for Hemedti, it’s clear that the vast amount of money earned from his gold-mining activities is a key enabler of the fearsome power he continues to wield in Khartoum and beyond.

Thursday, August 22, 2019

Livestock, birds die after mining resumes in Sudan - Health and environmental hazards of gold mining

Note from Sudan Watch Editor: This is terribly sad news. Some gold mining companies in several areas of Sudan are polluting the region with mercury and cyanide. Locals have protested against some gold extraction plants, environmentalists have been warning of the use of mercury and cyanide for years. The disgusting human beings responsible for such dreadful pollution ought to be found and jailed.

Article from Radio Dabanga
Date: 28 July 2019 - South Kordofan
Livestock, birds die after mining resumes in southern Sudan
Environmentalists collect dead birds in Wakara, South Kordofan, July 24, 2019 (RD)

Environmentalists reported the death of a large number of livestock and birds in Rashad and El Tadamon in South Kordofan, following the resumption of mining in the area according to a decision of the acting governor of the state.

On Thursday, residents of Wakara in El Tadamon gave the mining company in the area 72 hours to leave after large numbers of livestock and birds died since the company resumed its activities earlier this month.

Ahmed Mukhtar, Secretary-General of the National Committee for Environmental Advocacy, told Radio Dabanga that a vigil was held in front of the mosque of Wakara on Thursday, protesting the mining company’s presence in the area.

Notables and activists held a meeting with the locality’s executive director, in which they called for the immediate suspension of the company’s activities and an investigation into the deaths of the animals.

The National Committee for Environmental Advocacy supports their demands. In a statement on Thursday, the committee announced its “categorical rejection” of the governor’s decision to allow mining companies to resume their work in the region, and called on him to immediately cancel the measure.

The committee said it is closely following-up the work of the mining companies and is taking legal actions in case the rights of the people living in mining areas are violated.

Health hazards of gold mining

South Kordofan is one the states in Sudan richest in gold. While the work of many companies is regulated by laws and policies on large and medium-sized enterprises, artisan mining, using mercury and the highly toxic cyanide to extract gold from ore, is also widespread.

Environmentalists have been warning of the health and environmental hazards of the use of mercury and cyanide for years. In January 2018, a medical team led by the Health Minister of South Kordofan investigated the increase in miscarriages, the birth of deformed children, and cases of kidney failure in the area of El Tadamon.

A report published in November 2018 by the Sudan Democracy First Group (SDFG) entitled Cyanide Plants in South Kordofan State: Human Life is a Price for Gold Extraction, highlighted the human and environmental costs of traditonal gold mining in the region.

Protests against gold extraction plants in several parts of Sudan increased over recent years. People in Northern State, North Kordofan, and North Darfur as well took to the streets in fear for their health.

Israeli-owned company with gold mining interests in South Sudan obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax from the GoSS

HERE is an odd story. Not sure what it all means. Sounds complicated.
  • Misnak International, in line with the terms of a contract with Israeli firm 4MB Mining Ltd, raised invoices from time to time which 4MB Mining met
  • 4MB Mining told a court that after a consignment landed at the port of Mombasa on March 4, 2018, Misnak raised “exorbitant invoices” which RMB Mining rejected  
  • In turn, Misnak detained the consignments through Total Link Logistics, Union Link Logistics and Freight Forwarders (K) Ltd, who acted as its agents to exercise lien over the goods on account of non-payment
Article from The East African
By PHILIP MUYANGA
Dated Sunday 11 August 2019
Israeli, UK firms tussle over mining activities in South Sudan

In Summary
  • According to the contract between 4MB Mining Ltd and Misnak International the consignments were to be transported from Thailand through the port of Mombasa and arrive at the agreed destination before March 1, 2018.
  • 4MB Mining indicated that the agreed timeline was of essence since it had obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax on the consignments from the Government of South Sudan.
Photo: Containers await clearance within the port of Mombasa, in Kenya's coast. A court is hearing a case in which a logistics firm's agents held consignments at the Mombasa Port in Kenya on account of non-payment. PHOTO | FILE | NATION MEDIA GROUP 

An Israeli-owned company with goldmining interests in South Sudan was dealt a blow after Court of Appeal in Kenya said the High Court had no jurisdiction to hear a suit it filed against a UK logistics firm.

The Court of Appeal has upheld a preliminary objection to the suit by Misnak International (UK) Ltd contracted by 4MB Mining, the Israeli firm, to source, purchase and transport large consignments of mining materials to South Sudan saying the High Court had not assumed jurisdiction over it.

The South Sudan government awarded 4MB Mining a contract to undertake mining activities in Juba and Luri areas.

According to the appellate court, the manner in which jurisdiction is assumed is that those who file a case have to seek leave of the court to serve summons to the sued party outside the court’s jurisdiction to notify them of the existence of the suit. Appellate judges Daniel Musinga, Gatembu Kairu and Agnes Murgor said that it is upon service of the summons that a court assumes jurisdiction over a foreign defendant.

“The judge (of the High Court) never addressed her mind to the prayer for leave to serve the summons upon Misnak International outside the court’s jurisdiction,” said the judges.

According to the contract between 4MB Mining Ltd and Misnak International the consignments were to be transported from Thailand through the port of Mombasa and arrive at the agreed destination before March 1, 2018.

4MB Mining indicated that the agreed timeline was of essence since it had obtained a non-diplomatic exemption of import tax on the consignments from the Government of South Sudan and the exemption was conditional on consignments arriving at the Kenyan/Sudan border on or before April 5, 2018.

Misnak, in line with the terms of the contract, raised invoices from time to time which 4MB Mining met. 4MB Mining told the court that after the consignment landed at the port of Mombasa on March 4, 2018, Misnak raised “exorbitant invoices” which it rejected.

In turn, Misnak detained the consignments through Total Link Logistics, Union Link Logistics and Freight Forwarders (K) Ltd, who acted as its agents to exercise lien over the goods on account of non-payment.