Zambian President and Vedanta boss meet as mining giant faces expulsion

The copper mining giant faced expulsion from the country for allegedly failing to pay taxes
Zambian President and Vedanta boss meet as mining giant faces expulsion

Zambia’s leader on Wednesday held talks with the Chairman of Vedanta Resources after the copper mining giant faced expulsion from the country for allegedly failing to pay taxes, the presidency announced.

London-based Vedanta is the majority owner of Zambia’s largest copper mining firm, Konkola Copper Mines (KCM), which has been at the centre of a stand-off with the government. The state-owned ZCCM-IH is a minority shareholder in KCM. 

READ: KCM may leave Zambia as president vows to dissolve copper giant

Zambian President, Edgar Lungu has vowed to dissolve the firm, accusing KCM of violating its operational licence and not paying all its taxes.

Your Friends Also Read:  Nigeria Spends N896.7bn on Debt Servicing in Q1 of 2022

Vedanta has denied the allegations and is locked in a legal battle with the government.

Lungu has targeted the mining sector to generate tax revenue as Zambia struggles with growing debt, and has told international mining companies to leave the copper-rich country if they opposed government policy.

Zambia is Africa’s second-biggest copper-producing country after the Democratic Republic of Congo, and the sector is a major employer.

In a statement, the presidency said Lungu met Vedanta chairman Anil Argawal at the request of the investor.

“The President accepted to meet him to listen to what he had to say,” the statement said.

READ: Vedanta to challenge Zambia KCM’s provisional liquidator appointment

Your Friends Also Read:  Nigeria's Zenith Bank Posts N509Bn Gross Earnings In 9 Months

Argawal “expressed his desire to continue running the mine” and pay debts owed to suppliers and restructure the company shareholding, it added.

However, Lungu said he would not back down because the “position that the government has taken has the support of the people of Zambia and the meeting will not affect any ongoing liquidation process”, the statement read.

In May, a Zambian high court appointed a provisional liquidator to dissolve the company, but the High Court in Johannesburg ordered a halt to any sell-off of KCM assets.

READ: Vedanta to explore dialogue with Zambia over mine liquidation

Vedanta approached the South African High Court because Johannesburg is set to host the arbitration process.

Your Friends Also Read:  Ghana's inflation rate drops to 9 percent for January 2019.

All rights reserved. This material, and other digital content on this website, may not be reproduced, published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed in whole or in part without prior express written permission from News Central TV.

Contact: digital@newscentral.ng

Total
0
Shares

Leave a Reply

Previous Article
South Africa’s Aspen fined £8 million following UK probe

South Africa’s Aspen fined £8 million following probe

Next Article
South Africa announces visa waivers for 4 countries

South Africa announces visa waivers for 4 countries

Related Posts