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NewsDay

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Zimbabwe says now "owns" 51 pct of foreign miners

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HARARE – Zimbabwe’s government raised the stakes on Thursday in its drive to wrest majority control of foreign mining companies, with a minister saying the state now considered it owned 51 percent of firms that have not complied with local ownership laws. “All mining companies that have not complied … should note that 51 percent […]

HARARE – Zimbabwe’s government raised the stakes on Thursday in its drive to wrest majority control of foreign mining companies, with a minister saying the state now considered it owned 51 percent of firms that have not complied with local ownership laws.

“All mining companies that have not complied … should note that 51 percent of their shareholding is now deemed to be owned by the state,” empowerment minister Saviour Kasukuwere said in a statement.

It was not immediately clear which firms were being targeted, or whether President Robert Mugabe’s cash-strapped government planned to pay for the shares. Kasukuwere did not respond to requests for clarification.

The demand for foreign companies, particularly miners, to transfer a 51 percent stake in local operations to black investors is widely seen as a tactic by Mugabe’s ZANU-PF party to raise cash for elections that may come this year.

Johannesburg-listed Impala Platinum, the world’s second-biggest platinum producer, bowed to pressure last month to surrender half its Zimplats unit, although details of the transfer have not yet been worked out.

Analysts said this latest broadside from Kasukuwere might be more bluster than fact.

“I would treat this with quite a degree of skepticism,” said Nic Borain, an independent political analyst based in Cape Town.

“I would want to wait to see the specifics of how those shares would be transferred, how the assets would come to be in government hands, how government would exercise any control over those assets.”

The statement added that any profits accruing to the 51 percent stakes “should be regarded as property of the state”, and that other companies transacting with mining firms should remember that they are dealing with the government.

“Any attempt to defraud the state will result in prosecution,” it said.

Kasukuwere has previously said most major firms have complied or are in the process of complying, but he has not publicly endorsed plans relating to leading gold producer Metallon Gold, an unlisted South African miner, and Mwana Africa’s Bindura Nickel corporation.

Harare says its “indigenisation” policy is needed to redress the racial inequities of past colonial rule, but similar drives in other sectors have been disasters, most notably the government’s seizure of white-owned farmland that decimated commercial agriculture and led to widespread food shortages.-Reuters