The South African government has unveiled a new mining charter that requires mining companies to increase the share of their shareholding owned by blacks from 26 to 30% of their capital.
According to mines minister Gwede Mantashe, speaking on Thursday (September 27th) to the press, this measure aims to correct the economic inequalities inherited from apartheid. “This distribution must be effective in the next five years and must be distributed among employees (at least 5%), the communities that shelter the mines (at least 5%) and entrepreneurs (at least 20%)”. he added.
The authority to point out that the new charter, which was the subject of seven months of heated debate between the government and the mining industry, was adopted by “consensus among stakeholders”.
Indeed, 24 years after the official end of the apartheid regime, the country’s wealth still remains largely concentrated in the hands of the white minority, which represents 8% of the South African population.
As a reminder, the mining sector employs some 460,000 people in South Africa, but contributes only 5.1% of its revenues.
Trending
- Pan African insurer ATIDI eyes North and South Africa in expansion plan
- AfDB proposes new mineral backed currency for energy projects
- Rising transport and food costs have pushed Kenya’s headline inflation for January to 3.3 per cent
- The ECOWAS Bank for Investment and Development extends a XOF 10 billion line of credit to strengthen the private sector in Côte d’Ivoire
- 6th edition of the Financial Afrik Awards
- London-based Actis sells Java House to two private equity firms
- South Sudan’s Central Bank threatens to revoke Stanbic’s licence on airline row
- Passengers stranded in Nairobi as airlines suspend flights to Somalia