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Striking Gold is no Bonanza for Small Mali Town
Voice of America ^ | 17 August 2005 | Lisa Bryant

Posted on 08/19/2005 4:28:42 AM PDT by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island

The majority of the world's gold comes from some of the poorest countries, but local mining communities often reap just a fraction of the riches that lie beneath their soils. Mali is no exception. The West African nation ranks near the bottom of just about every U.N. development indicator, even though its the world's ninth-largest gold producer. The southern village of Sanso struggles to capitalize on Mali's gold rush.

On a sweltering morning, a parade of local dignitaries praised the rickety foundation of a new primary school, as village women sang in celebration. Five years ago, this village of 7,000 inhabitants deep in the scrub lands of southern Mali, literally struck gold when a pair of South African companies opened the nearby Morila mine.

The school is not being built with dollars from the mine's nuggets, but with financial donations from Europe and the labor of African youth volunteers.

Sanso's Mayor Dioting Mariko says the Morila mine has brought little to the village.

With the mine's opening, Mr. Mariko said, people thought Sanso would be able to develop.

But now, he doubts that will happen. The mine has paid for the construction of one mosque and 12 school classes in four villages. That is all, he said.

Dirt-poor Mali is among the low- and middle-income countries that extract two-thirds of the planet's gold. During the past decade gold has replaced cotton as Mali's top export.

But rural communities like Sanso are beginning to negotiate for a fairer share of the country's gold wealth and to make foreign mining companies accountable for potentially devastating, long-term health and environmental damages from their operations.

The Morila gold mine also offers a cautionary tale for villages once united in poverty, and now divided by wealth. Foreign miners and prostitutes lured by new job opportunities have more than tripled Sanso's population in five years, and local officials say likely brought HIV/AIDS to the village for the first time as well.

Mohamed Togola is a former school teacher from Sanso who works as Morila Mine's community relations liaison. Mr. Togola says the mine has created jealousy and enormous divisions among villagers who have profited from the mine and those who have not.

"This is so much expectation from the community side but for the case of Morila for instance, there's a kind of source in the painting between the community and the mine. They have different views of things. The mine would like to make much more benefits possible and the community would like to profit from that benefit," he said.

Morila is jointly operated by two South African companies, Randgold Resources and AngloGold Ashanti. Since it opened in October, 2000, the mine has generated nearly $180 million in profits. Each of the two companies has a 40 percent stake in the mine. The Malian government owns the rest.

Morila's acting manager, Samba Toure, takes a visitor on a tour of Morila's open pit mine, which looks like a big red crater amid this region of tall grasses and trees. "We are in front of the main pit. Which is 1.20 kilometer by 800 meters. And the final depth will be 200 meters. We start exploitation with pit one, in the southwest corner. And it was about 300,000 tons of oxide...mainly the ore is pyrite an arsenopyrite," he said.

Cyanide, a poison used to extract the ore, is detoxified in a fenced-off pond and recycled for further use. As a result, Mr. Toure said, there is no chance of cyanide contamination, a major worry with gold mines.

And during an earlier PowerPoint presentation at Morila's air-conditioned headquarters, Mr. Toure said the mine has already invested $1.2 million in a hodgepodge of development projects. Besides the schools and mosque cited by mayor Mariko, he said the money has been spent to upgrade a local health center, and build community gardens and a rice paddy.

"Before the mine was established here, did you assess the level of poverty of this community? I invite you to come and do a socioeconomic review...before, during and after. And you will [think about whether the mine enhances the well being of this community.]

Mr. Mariko says he thinks it does enhance the community. "Yes, 100 percent," he said.

While Morila and its miners' quarters are lit up at night, Sanso, about seven miles away, has no electricity or paved roads.

And while some villagers, like Chary Mariko, 27, have found well-paying jobs at the mine, many others have not.

Mr. Mariko said working in the mine is very difficult. He works a 16-hour shift and then gets two days off. He says he has not suffered any health problems mining at Morila. And his $300 monthly salary represents a small fortune in Mali, where the average per-capita income is $250 a year.

But Josson Mariko, a bony, middle-aged woman on her way to work in the fields with a friend, and no direct relation to Mariko the miner, said Morila has offered nothing but broken promises. Ms. Mariko said she used to work at the mine washing the miners clothes. But the work is finished now. None of her children have been able to find work at the mine either. So what interest, she asks, should she have in this mine?

Across the globe, communities are taking a growing interest in local gold mines. In Peru, Indonesia, Ghana, and elsewhere, they are demanding better pay and better environmental and health standards, although not always successfully.

Striking miners at Morila last year got the mine to establish a $500,000 community development fund to be tapped after the mine closes in 2011.

At Morila, manager Toure describes the mine as a Rolls Royce in environmental safety. He says its South African owners will comply with international standards when they close the mine, six years from now.

The World Bank, which has established a set of benchmarks on good mining practices, says large trans-national companies like those operating Morila largely adhere to them.

But activists like Mr. Sangare, of the Sahel Foundation, warn Morila may still be breeding a host of potentially devastating long-term problems, from sulfuric acid leakage to accidental cyanide contamination.

He says the community fund is a drop in the bucket to clean up such disasters.

Mr. Togola, Morila's community relations man, has other worries. If no long-term economic development projects are put in place, he says people will leave this area after the mine shuts down in search of work elsewhere. And Sanso the village of his birth, and the village he loves, will become a ghost town, with only old people remaining.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Foreign Affairs
KEYWORDS: africa; african; gold; labor; mali

1 posted on 08/19/2005 4:28:42 AM PDT by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island
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To: Our_Man_In_Gough_Island

The colonists and their dictator enablers already got that money settled.


2 posted on 08/19/2005 4:29:41 AM PDT by cyborg (I'm having the best day ever.)
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To: Our_Man_In_Gough_Island

BTW, the French colonised Mali so what does that tell you?


3 posted on 08/19/2005 4:30:07 AM PDT by cyborg (I'm having the best day ever.)
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To: cyborg

I'm not sure what it tells me - France colonized half the USA. What does it tell you?


4 posted on 08/19/2005 4:41:15 AM PDT by Our_Man_In_Gough_Island
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To: cyborg

It tells me the US needs to send those poor people more money, by way of their dictator, to make us feel better and the world more apt to like us.


5 posted on 08/19/2005 4:42:17 AM PDT by redfreedom
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To: redfreedom
...and the world more apt to like us.

If hating us causes us to send them money, why would anyone ever like us???

6 posted on 08/19/2005 5:03:00 AM PDT by Onelifetogive (* Sarcasm tag ALWAYS required. For some FReepers, sarcasm can NEVER be obvious enough.)
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To: Our_Man_In_Gough_Island
And his $300 monthly salary represents a small fortune in Mali, where the average per-capita income is $250 a year.

Whay does a company "owe" its local community beyond paying its employees and its taxes?

If you bleed all local companies dry, guess what, you won't have any local companies!

7 posted on 08/19/2005 5:07:14 AM PDT by Onelifetogive (* Sarcasm tag ALWAYS required. For some FReepers, sarcasm can NEVER be obvious enough.)
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To: Our_Man_In_Gough_Island
Here are the relevant financials:

"Morila is jointly operated by two South African companies, Randgold Resources and AngloGold Ashanti. Since it opened in October, 2000, the mine has generated nearly $180 million in profits. Each of the two companies has a 40 percent stake in the mine. The Malian government owns the rest."

So, the Malian government has majority ownership and control of $108 million in profits from the mine -- but the locals have seen little of the wealth. Instead of blaming the Malian government and the crooks and thugs no doubt running it, the VOA shamefully blames "the mine" as if a hole in the ground were a conscious entity.
8 posted on 08/19/2005 5:19:04 AM PDT by Rockingham
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To: Our_Man_In_Gough_Island; wardaddy

Replaced by governance that came from the British. They didn't leave a major mark on US governance so thank God for that! Most everywhere the French have gone, they've taken their failed form of government. The French colonists were as corrupt as the African dictators and chieftains.


9 posted on 08/19/2005 5:24:40 AM PDT by cyborg (I'm having the best day ever.)
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To: redfreedom

Some never learn.


10 posted on 08/19/2005 5:25:33 AM PDT by cyborg (I'm having the best day ever.)
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To: Onelifetogive; cyborg

I was just trying to think like a liberal.


11 posted on 08/19/2005 5:42:46 AM PDT by redfreedom
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To: redfreedom

Oh I know. Know thy enemy and all that ;-)


12 posted on 08/19/2005 5:46:47 AM PDT by cyborg (I'm having the best day ever.)
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To: Rockingham; cyborg

I hate to sound stupid but does that mean that the companies have 80% combined or 40% combined.

The problem with third world nations is that they often lack the technology and capital to extract resources.

They need saavy governments to make the best deals.

But....the saavier the government in deal making ...the likelier to be kleptocrats in the emerging world.

I mined all over the world and never paid anything but a declared royalty or simple business tax....

and it always involved corruption.

It's sad. The easiest way is to require the mining companies to pay a reasonable wage maybe....but I know that from a purist perspective that smacks of socialism.

likewise...this article does not mention the companies investment stake....which is probably huge.


13 posted on 08/19/2005 8:24:17 AM PDT by wardaddy (Israel will get nothing for Gaza.)
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To: wardaddy

Eeek! I got sloppy, and you are correct. A bit of quick web research established that the Mali government owns 20 per cent, which makes their profit $36 million. Although Morila is the most valuable mine, the Mail government also has 20 per cent stakes in three other smaller gold mines: Sadiola, Syama, and Yatela.



14 posted on 08/19/2005 9:36:49 AM PDT by Rockingham
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To: redfreedom

what dictator are you talking about?


15 posted on 09/13/2005 12:12:05 PM PDT by zimdog
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To: wardaddy

since EACH company has a 40% stake, its 80% combined and the Malian government controls the remaining 20%


16 posted on 09/13/2005 12:15:57 PM PDT by zimdog
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To: zimdog

I suppose Mali could always nationalize the mine.

I really don't know how the average mine of that scale breaks down.

20% to the government sounds reasonable...relatively speaking

i suppose it's what ever the lode will bear.


17 posted on 09/13/2005 1:40:19 PM PDT by wardaddy (OK.....it was my fault.)
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To: wardaddy

considering that the government of mali has spent considerable time and money to build a major hydroelectric dam that powers the mines of the region, 20% sounds fair. but like you, i don't really know how ownership of similar mines is figured.


18 posted on 09/13/2005 4:30:17 PM PDT by zimdog
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