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Barrick Mining employees meet with Malian court appointed administrator in capital at the reopening of office

Barrick Mining employees meet with Malian court appointed administrator in capital at the reopening of office

Two people familiar with the matter said that Malian tax officials reopened Barrick Mining’s office in the capital, under the supervision of a court appointed administrator. The office had been closed in April due to alleged nonpayment of taxes.

This is the first major development since the Malian court, on 16 June, placed the Canadian miner’s Loulo-Gounkoto complex under state control. It was a major escalation in the long-running dispute over taxes.

Barrick said that it would appeal the decision. It appointed former Malian Health Minister, Soumana Maadji as its provisional administrator.

Makadji, who is expected soon to resume operations at the complex, held a staff meeting at the Bamako Office on Monday afternoon. According to one of the attendees, he said that he would be visiting the mine site on Wednesday.

The mines will be able finance themselves once production resumes and gold sales resume.

Three people with knowledge of the situation said that he also met with subcontractors Monday.

Barrick's and Mali's Mines Ministry spokespeople did not immediately reply to requests for comments.

Barrick and government have been negotiating since 2023 about the implementation of the new mining code, which raises taxes and grants the government a larger share in gold mines.

The Loulo-Gounkoto mine complex has been closed since mid-January, after the Malian military government seized Barrick's stocks and blocked its gold exports. Barrick's Bamako main office has been closed for several months. (Reporting and editing by Joe Bavier, Tomaszjanowski and Tomasz Crowe)

(source: Reuters)