Congo Nears Deal With Israeli Billionaire to Recover Assets
Democratic Republic of Congo’s government announced it is
nearing a deal with Dan Gertler’s Fleurette Group to take back billions of
dollars worth of its mining and oil assets in the country.
Companies owned by the Israeli billionaire, who is facing
U.S. sanctions for alleged corruption in Congo, control mining and oil permits
throughout the Central African nation as well as lucrative royalty streams for
some of the world’s biggest copper and cobalt projects run by Glencore Plc and
Eurasian Resources Group Sarl.
A spokesman for Gertler declined to comment. Gertler has
denied all corruption allegations and he’s never been charged.
A Congolese government commission is close to reaching a
memorandum of understanding with Fleurette Group to recover oil and mining
assets valued at more than $2 billion “as well as a substantial part of the
Kamoto Copper Company royalties,” according to minutes from Friday’s council of
ministers meeting read on national television by Augustin Kibassa, minister for
post and telecommunications.
Kamoto Copper is managed by Glencore, which declined to
comment.
A consortium of Congolese and international non-governmental
organizations known as Congo is Not for Sale praised the deal as a “first step”
in recovering Gertler’s assets in an emailed statement Saturday. It called on
the government “to make the process and results of the negotiations more
transparent.”
Gertler came to Congo to deal diamonds in the late 1990s
when the country was at war. He built close ties to Joseph Kabila, who was
president from 2001 to 2019. His businesses soon expanded to copper, cobalt,
oil, gold and other minerals, often partnering with mining behemoths like
Glencore.
But his relationship to Kabila brought scrutiny from
anti-corruption groups, which accused him of paying bribes and stealing money
from one of the world’s poorest countries. He denies all charges.
The U.S. sanctioned Gertler in December 2017 in part to
force Kabila from power after he’d postponed scheduled elections. The Treasury
Department has expanded measures against Gertler’s companies and associates
twice more, including in December of last year.
Since Felix Tshisekedi took over as Congo’s president in
2019, the government’s relationship with Gertler has cooled. Tshisekedi has
made it a priority to take back two oil blocks owned by Gertler’s companies
along the border with Uganda, which could be worth billions.
Friday’s announcement shows Tshisekedi’s government wants to
claw back even more of Gertler’s empire.
The country’s justice minister is now examining the proposed
deal with Fleurette with the hopes of concluding an agreement that would “allow
the Congolese state to fully take back possession of these mining and oil
assets,” Kibassa said.
Comments
Post a Comment