Barrick鈥檚 Mali mine feeds Russian war machine, advocacy group says

Barrick Gold (TSX: ABX; NYSE: GOLD) faced criticism outside its annual general meeting on Tuesday in Toronto for supporting Malian rulers with ties to Russia.
The operator of the Loulo-Gounkoto gold complex in the West African country increased tax, royalty and dividend payments to the government by almost half to $380.7 million last year compared with 2022, according to company documents highlighted by The Washington, DC-based Blood Gold Report. Barrick鈥檚 production from the site remained constant at 547,000 oz., a company presentation shows.
鈥淓ven before this increase, Barrick Gold was already the junta鈥檚 single biggest taxpayer,鈥 the Blood Gold Report said by email on Tuesday in response to questions. 鈥淚n the past year, the Malian junta has fallen even further under Russian influence, with predictable consequences for human rights. In January, Malian armed forces assisted by foreign military personnel executed at least 25 civilians, according to a United Nations report.鈥
Barrick Gold hasn鈥檛 replied to several emails from The Northern Miner seeking comment over the past month on the issue. 九游下载apk reported earlier in April on the junta, which came to power in a coup in 2021, and its ties to Russia鈥檚 mercenary group Wagner.
Blood Gold Report says it鈥檚 focused on links between western mining companies, authoritarian African governments and Russian mercenaries. It鈥檚 primarily concerned with operations in Mali, Central African Republic and Sudan. The group asked to speak with Barrick CEO Mark Bristow and chairman John Thornton, but wasn鈥檛 allowed into Tuesday鈥檚 meeting.
Local communities
The company under Bristow since 2019 has a strong record of respecting the countries where it operates. Its recent deals with Pakistan for the Reko Diq development give local state and national governments about half the $7 billion project. In Papua New Guinea, a new agreement for the Porgera mine gives locals more than half. And in Tanzania, Bristow has fostered a new culture at a mine that faced human rights abuse allegations under different management.
Barrick is one of several mining companies operating in Mali 鈥 the others are B2Gold (TSX: BTO; NYSE-AM: BTG), Allied Gold (TSX: AAUC) and Resolute Mining (ASX: RSG; LSE: RSG) 鈥 that are part of wider gold system that has contributed a total of some $3 billion to Russia since its invasion of Ukraine in early 2022, the advocacy group says.
B2Gold operates the Fekola mine in Mali鈥檚 southwest near the border with Senegal, but hasn鈥檛 increased its payments to the government, the Blood Gold Report said.
Barrick says it鈥檚 building schools in Mali and training the local workforce not just in mining but in business courses. Some 96% of employees are from Mali, 20% are employed directly from surrounding communities, for 1,348 permanent jobs at Loulo and Gounkoto, the company says. Other initiatives include local sanitation, anti-malaria efforts, vaccinations and food drives. It says it has built new pools and water tanks, upgraded roads and built seven farms to empower women.
The company has given more than twice as much to the Malian government as Ottawa鈥檚 C$352 million in humanitarian aid to Ukraine, noted The Blood Gold Report鈥檚 David Clement, one of its authors.
鈥淭his is an intolerable situation for all Canadians,鈥 Clement said in emailed remarks. 鈥淏arrick Gold must withdraw from Mali immediately.鈥
Junta payments
Companies in Mali account for $10 million a month in payments to the junta, the Blood Gold Report says, citing United States intelligence reports. The junta revised the country鈥檚 gold mining code last year to increase the state鈥檚 stake in operations to 35% from 20%.
Russia is pressing for more money to be raised, the group says, citing a Mali-Russia agreement in November to build a metals refinery in Bamako. In January, Wagner seized the country鈥檚 largest artisanal mine, Intahaka in northern Mali, according to the Blood Gold Report.
Allied Gold runs the Sadiola open-pit mine in the country鈥檚 west. The company plans to expand its annual production to about 200,000 oz. a year over a six-year period.
Resolute Mining operates the Syama underground gold mine in southwest Mali, about 30 km from the country鈥檚 border with Cote d鈥橧voire and roughly 300 km southeast of the capital Bamako.
A jihadist insurgency has destabilized the country鈥檚 north and killed thousands since 2012. The coup in 2021 was the second since 2020. Former colonial ruler France pulled out its last troops from Mali in 2022 as counter-terrorism efforts proved ineffective and the government brought in Wagner. UN peacekeepers also left.
In January, the country joined Burkina Faso and Niger 鈥 which also have governments installed by coups 鈥 in leaving the Economic Community of West African States, the area鈥檚 main trade hub, for fear of sanctions and having to promise elections.
{{ commodity.name }}
{{ post.title }}
{{ post.date }}
Comments
typecheck
This report is strangely missing crucial information. The “group” is what “group”? What is its credential to lay such a serious charge on Barrick Gold? Why should Barrick Gold respond to an accusation that has no evidence. A very strange post on a mining website to say the least.