Australia’s Resolute Mining states it will $160 million to Mali’s judgment junta to willpower a tax disagreement, more than a week after the business’s CEO and 2 other workers were apprehended in the West African nation
ByMARK BANCHEREAU Associated Press
November 18, 2024, 10: 04 AM
DAKAR, Senegal — Australia’s Resolute Mining stated Monday it would pay $160 million to Mali’s judgment junta to willpower a tax conflict, more than a week after the business’s CEO and 2 staffmembers were apprehended in the West African nation.
Earlier this month, the Australian gold mining business’s CEO Terence Holohan and the 2 others were apprehended in Mali’s capital Bamako on Nov. 8 as they were goingto the nation for talks over an undefined disagreement. The federalgovernment did not state why they were apprehended.
Andrew Wray, the business’s non-executive chairman, stated in a declaration released on Resolute Mining’s site that all declares versus the business made by Malian authorities, “including those rel