Canadian Manufacturing

Barrick Gold settles months-long tax dispute with Tanzania

by The Canadian Press   

Canadian Manufacturing
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The deal involves a US$300-million payment, transferring a 16 per cent interest in three gold mines to the Tanzanian government, as well as increased royalties and taxes

TORONTO—Barrick Gold Corp. says it has reached a new partnership deal with the government of Tanzania to settle a tax dispute with its majority-owned Acacia Mining plc.

The company says the framework signed Thursday includes creating a new Tanzanian operating company to manage Acacia’s three mines in the country, and a 50-50 sharing of economic benefits of the mines between the new company and the government.

Barrick said the benefits sharing will be achieved through transferring a 16 per cent interest in the three mines to the government, as well as through royalties and taxes.

The country’s government will also have a say in the new company’s operations, which will maximize employment for Tanzanians and look to increase gold processing in the country, Barrick said.

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The company says the two sides have also agreed to form a working group to resolve the outstanding tax claims, and as a gesture of good faith Acacia would make a US$300- million payment to the government.

The deal, still subject to approval by Acacia, is the outcome of months of talks after the Tanzania government handed London-based Acacia a US$190-billion tax bill in July, alleging the company, which is 63.9-per-cent owned by Barrick, owes that much in back-taxes and penalties.

Tanzania had also imposed an export ban on concentrated gold and silver in March, which Barrick said at the time could impact about six per cent of its estimated 5.3 million- to 5.6-million ounces of gold production for the year through Acacia’s mines.

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