Mining Mirror January 2019 | Page 10

Global The curse of Simandou Corruption has sterilised one of the greatest iron ore deposits on earth, writes Leon Louw. O Simandou’s tainted history Rio Tinto first acquired the exploration rights at Simandou in 1997, with the [8] MINING MIRROR JANUARY 2019 The hills of Simandou in Guinea, which became a huge point of dispute between several stakeholders. intention of developing what is probably the richest iron ore deposit on the continent. Though, after a decade of dragging its feet, the then president of Guinea, Lansana Conté, lost his patience and stripped the Anglo-Australian miner of half its rights in July 2008. Enter Steinmetz and BSGR, who six months later, shortly before Conté’s untimely death, received mining rights to blocks one and two of Simandou. Then, in 2010, with the iron ore price hovering close to its highest levels ever, Brazilian mining giant Vale acquired a chunk of Simandou by making an upfront payment of USD500-million to BSGR, in what became known as the ‘deal of the century’. When Alpha Condé (not related to Lansana) took over as the president of Guinea in 2010, he demanded that the holders of Simandou’s mining rights ne of the most tainted projects in African mining history has made the headlines again after Rio Tinto and Chinese company Chinalco failed to pull off a sales agreement signed in October 2016. Simandou’s history reads like the script of a Hollywood movie: Corruption, deceit, intimidation, threats, insults, and accusations involving some of the most controversial business characters and political heavyweights around, have dominated the discourse on what should be the most prolific iron ore mine in the world. The announcement by Rio Tinto is the latest in a long list of statements by several entities, media houses, individuals, governments, and companies; and yet, it appears that there is still no clarity on who should legally own what. In 2014, this decade-long saga was placed on the agenda of the International Centre for the Settlement of Investment Disputes, an international tribunal based in Paris, France. At the end of a two-week-long hearing, during which infamous Israeli business billionaire Beny Steinmetz attempted to clear his name, Guinea lawyers said Simandou is an “exceptional case of exceptional importance with evidence of corruption which is equally exceptional”. Steinmetz was detained for four days in Israel last year and placed under house arrest while police investigated allegations of fraud, forgery, and money laundering. According to reports, Steinmetz had arranged for bribes to be paid to the government of Guinea to secure his company’s — Beny Steinmetz Group Resources (BSGR) — mining rights at Simandou. Steinmetz has made millions from questionable mining deals in Africa, mostly in the diamond fields of West Africa. pay the new government for the claims he said were illegally awarded by his predecessors. In 2011, Rio Tinto settled the matter by paying USD711-million for blocks three and four, but Steinmetz refused to fork out a whopping USD1.25-billion for blocks one and two and called it extortion. This, of course, put him on a collision course with Condé, who eventually, in 2014, evicted BSGR from Guinea. In the meantime, Vale pulled out of Guinea in 2012, blaming a slump in the iron ore price. Since then, numerous court cases involving Rio Tinto, Vale, Steinmetz, and the Guinea government have further blighted a project which was once hailed as the saviour of Guinea. Victims of corruption Besides Steinmetz, who is still being investigated, several other people www.miningmirror.co.za