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Giving assets to Mugabe PDF Print E-mail
Thursday, 03 July 2008

By Tim Webb

MINING giant Anglo American and Impala Platinum are in talks with Robert Mugabe’s regime about handing over large stakes in their Zimbabwean subsidiaries to ‘indigenous investors’.

The opposition party, the Movement for Democratic Change, and London-based analysts said it was likely that these deals, worth hundreds of millions of dollars, would be used to raise money for the regime. MDC spokesman Nelson Chamisa told this reporter: ‘The indigenisation bill is another dimension of the kleptocracy. It’s not intended to legitimately promote indigenous investment.’

Mugabe this year rubberstamped ‘indigenisation and economic empowerment’ laws, which will force all foreign companies in Zimbabwe to hand up to 51 per cent of their assets there to unspecified indigenous investors. It applies to all foreign companies but it is understood that the lucrative mining sector is being targeted. Zimbabwe holds the world’s second largest deposits of platinum, according to London-based bank Ambrian Capital. South African-based Impala Platinum is also continuing talks about the transfer of a 15 per cent stake in its Zimbabwean subsidiary, Zimplats, which has a stock market value of GBP650m.

Knox Chitiyo, head of the Africa programme at think tank the Royal United Services Institute, said: ‘The bill will almost certainly be used as a fundraiser for the government, since to do well in business in Zimbabwe, political links are vital.’
A spokesman for Anglo American said: ‘We are continuing to act in order to comply with the requirements of the indigenisation legislation.’— The Guardian, London

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