Canada: As part of an investigation into Swiss bank transfers, the Vancouver office of Ivanhoe Mines underwent a police search.
摘要
日期: 2022年12月15日
地点: 刚果民主共和国
企业
Kamoa Kakula (joint venture between Ivanhoe, Zijn Mining and Government of Democratic Republic of Congo) - Parent Company项目
Kamoa-Kakula - Operation受影响的
受影响的总人数: 数字未知
Public entity: ( 数字未知 - 加拿大 , 采矿 , Gender not reported ) , 小区: ( 数字未知 - 加拿大 , 采矿 , Gender not reported )议题
Corruption , 向政府付款的披露/运用回应
Response sought: 否
信息来源: News outlet
"Police searched Ivanhoe Mines’ Vancouver office as part of Swiss bank transfer investigation", 15 December 2022
"Police searched Canada’s Ivanhoe Mines’ (TSX: IVN) Vancouver office seeking information on $2.7 million in bank transfers from Ivanhoe to a Swiss bank account in connection with contracts for its Congolese mining operations, The Globe and Mail reported Thursday.
Ivanhoe said it cooperated with the search in November 2021 and that no charges have been laid against the company or its directors or employees...
Some of the documents authorized for seizure were related to three bank transfers from Ivanhoe to the Swiss bank account of a company called Stucky Technologies from 2015 to 2018, A Swiss engineering firm, to work with Congo’s state electricity company on hydropower supplies for Ivanhoe’s Kamoa-Kakula copper project in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), The Globe and Mail reported...
Also on Thursday, US-based investigative organization the Sentry published a new report: “Gaming the System: How a Canadian Mining Giant Undermined the Law in the DRC, examining the miner’s control of deposits in the DRC’s copper belt. The report alleges that Ivanhoe received preferential treatment when Congolese authorities extended its exploration licences beyond the legal limit of 15 years and that some extensions gained approval much faster than the average processing time for other applicants.
“Evidence examined by The Sentry reveals that the multibillion-dollar company, which is led by American-born founder Robert Friedland, arranged to share a potentially lucrative cut of local subsidiaries with a politically connected individual, just as the Congolese government took apparently illegal actions allowing Ivanhoe to maintain exploration licenses,” the report reads. “According to The Sentry’s analysis, those licenses by law should have been surrendered by Ivanhoe years ago.”
The Sentry report claims dealmaking may not have ended when former Congolese president Joseph Kabila left office in 2019. Hidden camera videos published this September apparently show Vidiye Tshimanga, then a close advisor to DRC President Félix Tshisekedi, claiming to hold 20% of an unidentified Ivanhoe Mines subsidiary...
Ivanhoe also issued a statement, saying The Globe and Mail article and the Sentry report “contain numerous inaccuracies, misrepresentations of Democratic Republic of Congo law and Ivanhoe Mines’ business relationships, and demonstrate a fundamental misunderstanding of the legislative framework under the Democratic Republic of Congo mining codes.”..."