We are
in the process of cleaning the mining sector
-
-Minister
Fuh Calistus Gentry
The emblematic and
go-getting secretary of state in the ministry of mines, industry and
technological development, Fuh Calistus Gentry in the following interview
throws light on the efforts being made by his ministry to put order in
Cameroon’s mining sector. Excepts
Mr. Minister, there has
been consistent reduction in the contribution of the mining sector to the
country’s growth in spite of the enormous potentials. What accounts for this?
Fuh Calistus Gentry |
I
would rather say there has not been a consistent growth in the contribution to
the country’s development. The mining sector takes a long time to develop. We
gave permits. According to the old law, these permits can legally be managed
for eleven years just looking for minerals. We revised the law recently so that
the maximum time to look for minerals is seven years. That tells you that it’s
an activity that has a long gestation period because it needs to find something
in quantities that are substantial in order to warrant financing that sometimes
involves many nations, banks and sometimes necessitating displacements of
communities. So, when that thing is found in a reasonable quantity then, it
leads to a feasibility study which involves finding out whether it is worth the
trouble displacing people and what impact it has got on the economy of the
nation. Aspects of environment and taxation are looked upon and it is then that
it works up to a bankable feasibility. Again, there are projects that would be
operational for 25 years. That is why a mining lease is up to 25 years and a
project can go up to 50 years. People putting in the money are not in Cameroon
and so there is need for so many assurances before engagements are undertaken.
That is why these projects take a long time. Added to these is infrastructure
that needs to be developed.
But Cameroon is over 50
years old as an independent state. Concretely, what quantity of what mineral is
produced for what impact to the government and local population?
Sometimes
around the First and Second World War, Cameroon was a major producer of
titanium. Now, with big mining companies, their targets are well defined. For
example, we brought in the Mining Code that allows companies guaranteed
security of their investments only in 2001. Before that period, only bilateral
agreements could be done in Cameroon. The advent of mining was only when that
code was put in place which gives a clear picture of who gets what.
What we produce now is gold and diamond by
artisanal means. Most of the other minerals we produce which CAPAM did some
efforts in places are all semi to precious metals which are easily attractable
by artisanal means. Others like iron ore, uranium, bauxite are at various
stages of feasibility realization. We are talking here about hard minerals
because in the petroleum and gas sectors, there is a lot of production.
A few years back, your
ministry, through CAPAM, launched Operation Gold to canalize gold into the
formal circuit of the economy. What became of the campaign?
The
operation was to buy gold that is produced so as either to be put as gold
reserves or exported to bring export earnings to the country. CAPAM did not
have money as it had to rely on hand-outs from the ministry of finance to buy the
gold. What was given to CAPAM was not enough to buy gold even from one
producer. That campaign has been structured in a new way now. The prime
minister has just signed a text which stipulates that 15 percent of all the
gold produced by any mechanized artisanal mining company will be subject to
conditions of large-scale mining in terms of taxation and state participation.
In this regard, these companies will be subject to paying corporate tax which
we have evaluated into the quantity of gold that is approximate. This is
because the places are remote. 70 percent of this will be given to the ministry
of finance and they will give back 30 percent which will be used to continue
buying gold. We believe that after sometimes, the fund will grow in such a way
that it can buy all the gold produced which will solve the problem of why
Operation Gold failed. Again, 10 percent of it will be used to develop projects
where these activities are taking place like water, school, health centres so
that the population of these areas can benefit. We have also installed
inspectors on each site composing five people; a CAPAM representative,
representative of the administration, a gendarme officer, police officer and a
representative of the company. They will give production values otherwise our
collection will be useless. Part of this money will be used to pay them because
if they are not properly paid, they will be corrupted and will not give true
values. There is also a supervisory committee that will go down the field to
ensure that all this is implemented. From this month of August, there will be
order in the mining sector and artisanal mining will start giving money to the
state.
There has been much
talk about anarchy and illegal exploitation in the sector but sanctions are rare
to come by. What explains this? Is there complicity somewhere?
The
illegality was instituted by the fact that the law gave the right of the
small-scale mining only to Cameroonians. These are people who think that
artisanal mining means that you should take a spade and a hoe to a mining site.
It is a surface phenomenon. In Brazil, Ghana, Colombia, Peru, South Africa …,
different levels of mechanization and sophistication are involved. So, our own
artisanal mining could not be able to get a simple washing plan to recover the
gold. So, they called on the expertise and financial capabilities of people
from outside Cameroon and that is where illegality set is. And these people
came and use other Cameroonians to take licenses. There was no basis on which
to levy any tax because the only tax they paid was advalorem tax. Even that,
they did not declare any real figures. So, it was a tax-free activity. We
couldn’t do much because there were no texts that gave us the ability to walk
in and create order. These texts have been signed. Permits were given randomly
and we have put a stop to it. Permits will hence be given to people only when
the location of their sites can be identified. When we will resume giving
permits for artisanal mining, it will be done in a strict manner and under the
supervision of the minister and not the regional delegate as was the case
before.
There are complaints
that companies with exploration licenses end up digging up everything without
authorization. What is being done to halt the unorthodox practice?
Most
artisanal licenses are found within exploration licenses. If the artisanal
operation was done under the appropriate laws, problems would not have arisen.
For example, nobody in an artisanal mining project can use more than three
excavators under the new text. These operations are not supposed to compete
with large-scale mining because the people who do large-scale mining have their
interest deeper and artisanal mining helps them to locate what they are looking
for. Now, before an artisanal mining permit is issued, the owner must be
informed by the state. We do not also encourage people who have exploration
licenses to get into artisanal mining because they will not develop that
large-scale mining. When this order will reign, it will have a triple effect as
the environment, taxation and the rest will become beneficial to the state, the
local population will benefit from the activity through small project and also
large-scale mining will get a boost as we will encourage miners to concentrate
on their permits, failure of which we will withdraw them.
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