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Zambia president vows to wind up copper giant KCM

Zambian President Edgar Lungu on Tuesday pledged to dissolve KCM, the country's largest copper producer, in a deepening dispute with foreign mining companies over tax and employment.
FILE PHOTO: Zambian President Edgar Lungu reacts after participating in a discussion at the World Economic Forum on Africa 2017 meeting in Durban, South Africa May 4, 2017. REUTERS/Rogan Ward/File Photo

Zambian President Edgar Lungu on Tuesday pledged to dissolve KCM, the country’s largest copper producer, in a deepening dispute with foreign mining companies over tax and employment.

KCM is owned by London-based Vedanta Resources, with the state-owned ZCCM-IH as a minority shareholder.

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 the new tax regime.

“We are resolved and determined on the KCM liquidation process because all people in the Copperbelt (mining region) want Vedanta to go,” Lungu said in a speech broadcast on state radio.

“This is not my decision alone but the people, and I will not abandon you on KCM,” he told supporters in Ndola.

A court hearing in Lusaka into the appointment of a provisional liquidator to run KCM, which employs 13,000 people, was adjourned for a week on Tuesday.

“Vedanta (has) reiterated its commitment to Zambia, and to the development and sustainability of Konkola Copper Mines,” Vedanta said in a statement last week.

The company said the government had made “unfounded allegations” over alleged unpaid taxes and that its business was unprofitable due to rising tax and electricity bills.

Companies have warned that the proposals could trigger a mass withdrawal of investment and thousands of redundancies.

“KCM is a single largest employer in the country and the impact of this liquidation could be devastating,” said independent business analyst Maambo Hamaundu.

“A few weeks ago we were given pronouncements by government officials that the mine was working properly but suddenly it’s being liquidated. Foreign investors are apprehensive.”

Zambia is Africa’s second-biggest copper-producing country after the Democratic Republic of Congo.

Vedanta, owned by Indian billionaire Anil Agarwal, is seeking international arbitration to resolve the dispute, with some analysts saying the company could be replaced by a Chinese firm.

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