Tanzanian
president orders immediate review of mining laws
DAR
ES SALAAM, June 12 (Xinhua) -- Tanzanian President John Magufuli on Monday
ordered relevant authorities, including Parliament, to immediately review and
amend mining laws to ensure that the east African nation benefited from its
resources.
Speaking shortly after he was presented with
the second report on mineral concentrates in the commercial capital Dar es
Salaam, the President also ordered the review and amendment of laws pertaining
to the oil and gas industry.
Nehemiah Osoro, the chairman of a special
committee that compiled the second mineral concentrates report, said the report
revealed that there was massive cheating by mining companies on the amount of
gold exports and tax evasion.
For example, said Osoro, the report showed
that between 1998 and March 2017, between 44,000 and 61,000 containers of
mineral concentrates worth between 49.12 billion U.S. dollars and 83.32 billion
U.S. dollars were exported outside the country without the country getting a
single cent from royalties and taxes.
"This is daylight robbery. We have to
take hard decisions to stop this from happening again," said the
president.
He added: "These laws should be
reviewed and amended for the benefit of country. We need investors but they
should operate on a win-win situation. We should share the benefits of our
resources."
At the same time, Magufuli ordered the
investigation of all former and current government officials who were involved
in the signing of mining agreements that led the country to incurring losses
amounting to billions of U.S. dollars.
He said the officials to be investigated
included former mining ministers and senior lawyers who entered into mining
deals that created loopholes for foreign mining companies to rip-off the
country.
"Our children are dying for lack of
medicines while our gold is being exported abroad without our knowledge. This
must stop now," fumed the president, adding that with its abundance
resources Tanzania was not supposed to be labeled as poor.
President Magufuli was vividly angry when
the report revealed that Acacia mining company had no records showing it was
registered in Tanzania.
On May 24, Magufuli sacked Minister for Energy
and Minerals Sospeter Muhongo after the first report on mining concentrates
showed he was implicated in mining firms' undeclared mineral sand exports.
The report revealed that the undeclared
mineral sand exports led to tax evasion by the mining firms.
Magufuli said the report revealed that
mining firms, including Acacia Mining, cheated over mineral sand exports for
smelting abroad, making the east African nation to lose millions of U.S.
dollars.
Magufuli asked the minister to resign when he
was reacting to recommendations made to him in the report by a special
committee he formed in March to investigate on how mineral sand was transported
abroad by mining firms for smelting without paying due taxes.
The president also dissolved the Tanzania
Mineral Audit Agency (TMAA) Board of Directors and suspended the agency's Chief
Executive Officer, Dominic Rwekaza, for what he termed as negligence.
The report revealed that Acacia Mining
declared the presence of gold, copper and silver in its mineral sand exports
but did not declare other precious metals in the consignments, the president
said in a televised address.
Mining accounts for about 4 percent of
Tanzania's gross domestic product.
Acacia, majority owned by Barrick Gold, has
three Tanzania gold mines that also produce copper.
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