AVZ Discussion 2022

Spikerama

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@JAG @TDITD and everyone else who is using the campaign assets.

French version of Adele is up now.

 
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Frank

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Some interesting reading regarding China's Road and Belt intiative, old but very relevant.
Just think about why AVZ is stuck, not that hard to understand....


China built Congo a toll road that led straight to the ruling family​

Bloomberg News | February 3, 2022 | 10:15 am Battery Metals Intelligence Africa China Cobalt Copper
China built Congo a toll road that led straight to the ruling family

Former DRC President Joseph Kabila. Photo by the US Department of State, Wikimedia Commons.
For 250 hot and dusty miles, the two-lane highway cuts through central Africa, its path lined with the carcasses of trucks, buses, and minivans. But this modest road holds outsize value for global markets, connecting some of the continent’s richest mines to the rest of the world—most notably, China.
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Along this route, thousands of flatbed trucks haul sheets of copper and sacks of cobalt hydroxide, essential for electric cars and other 21st century technologies. Their drivers must pay steep tolls, as much as $900 for a round trip.

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And for almost a decade, records indicate, a cut of those tolls flowed to the family of one politician: Joseph Kabila, the former president of the Democratic Republic of Congo.
The toll payments illustrate how Kabila blurred the lines between state and private business, documents reviewed by Bloomberg News suggest.
By striking such deals with his regime, Chinese companies over the past 15 years came to dominate Congo’s mining industry, down to the roads the country’s minerals travel for export.

The relationship with Kabila has been of strategic benefit to China in its economic rivalry with the U.S. And it has helped Congo, a nation of 105 million, become Africa’s largest producer of copper and the world’s biggest source of cobalt. Yet, as on much of the continent, a foreign power and a country’s elite, not the general population, have reaped the benefits of natural resources.
Like seams of cobalt, business arrangements around the toll road have long been buried. The trail begins with the company Kabila’s government contracted to rebuild and maintain the highway: state-controlled China Railway Group Ltd., one of the largest construction companies in the world.

Someone needed to collect the tolls that would pay for the roadwork, and there the former president’s family saw an opportunity to cash in. Two management companies, one of which was co-founded by a Kabila family investment firm, have misappropriated $238 million since 2015, allege a pair of audits by Congo’s top anticorruption official seen by Bloomberg. China Railway didn’t respond to emails and phone calls seeking comment. Nor did Kabila or his family. In an email, the Chinese embassy in Kinshasa, Congo’s capital, said its government always asks Chinese companies to respect local laws and regulations and to “never interfere in Congolese political affairs.”

The Kabilas’ involvement in the toll road came to light through the biggest leak ever of financial documents from Africa. A consortium of five nongovernmental organizations and 19 media outlets, including Bloomberg, gained access to bank records obtained by the Paris-based Platform to Protect Whistleblowers in Africa and the French news organization Mediapart.
The resulting articles and reports—published under the name “Congo Hold-Up”—demonstrate the extent to which the country’s most powerful family used the Congo unit of Gabon-based Groupe BGFIBank SA to serve its private interests during a period in which at least $138 million in state funds passed through the lender to Kabila’s family and associates. They also show how Chinese companies transferred tens of millions of dollars to the same network. In December, Kabila’s lawyers denied wrongdoing and called the reporting “a campaign of defamation, slanderous denunciations, denigrations, and untruths.”

At the center of many of the toll-road transactions, the investigation found, is a 59-year-old Chinese businessman, Cong Maohuai, who arrived in Congo a quarter of a century ago and built an array of companies with a hand in the country’s most lucrative industries: infrastructure and the mining of gold, cobalt, copper, tin, and lithium.

Cong also owns the five-star Fleuve Congo Hotel in Kinshasa. Twenty-two stories tall, the glassy building overlooks the compounds of foreign embassies and the homes of many of the country’s richest people, including Kabila, whose main residence in the city is only a few blocks away. Cong, who works out of an office on the hotel grounds, served as president of the Chinese Chamber of Commerce in Congo’s copper and cobalt region from 2008 until 2015, when he became president of the Congo Overseas Chinese Association. He denies any impropriety and says he isn’t a middleman for either Kabila or the Chinese government.
The businessman controls the companies that collect tolls on the mineral highway, one of which he says he acquired from the Kabila family investment firm. Some of this revenue, bank records show, flowed to a company that was used to direct funds to the former president’s relatives and entourage. Although sometimes described in the media as an adviser to the former president, Cong denies any connection to Kabila, beyond occasional meetings at public events.

“Just like any other businessperson in the world, I am free to pursue business opportunities in the DRC or anywhere else in the world, so long as I carry out my activities in compliance with the governing laws,” Cong told the consortium. “That has always been my practice.”
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Outside powers have a long history of coveting Congo’s natural resources. It began under Belgian colonial rule and continued during the country’s tumultuous post-independence period, when Congo was caught between sides in the Cold War.

Increased scrutiny of Congo’s mining industry comes after a pivotal moment. Kabila, a former military commander who’d trained in China, assumed power from his father, who was assassinated in 2001. In 2019, Felix Tshisekedi succeeded him as president after the two men made a deal to resolve a disputed election in which another candidate almost certainly won the vote.
Tshisekedi, the son of a well-known opposition politician, initially governed Congo in coalition with Kabila, but he’s since sidelined or co-opted those loyal to his predecessor. Now his administration is revisiting contracts with Chinese and other foreign companies negotiated under Kabila that it views as skewed against the Congolese people.

In the early 2000s, as Congo emerged from years of civil war, China seized an opportunity to buy mines, a process that’s accelerated in recent years. In 2008 the countries agreed that Chinese companies would finance $3 billion worth of infrastructure and build a $3.2 billion copper and cobalt project known as Sicomines, whose tax-free profits would repay the investments.

China Railway teamed up with state-owned Power Construction Corp. of China Ltd., also known as PowerChina. Both companies are major players in President Xi Jinping’s “Belt and Road” initiative, which makes investments in infrastructure around the world, partly as a way to project the country’s growing economic power. PowerChina didn’t respond to requests for comment.
That same year, Congo separately awarded a subsidiary of China Railway the first of three no-bid contracts to rebuild its main export and import routes—including the key mining highway, which runs from Kolwezi to the Zambian border. Tolls would pay for the roadwork.
The highways were in desperate need of an upgrade, and China Railway was on the ground and ready. The roads led to riches. Copper and cobalt exports increased more than 50-fold under Kabila, with about 1.3 million tons of metal trucked out of Congo in 2018, his final year in power.

Much of the highway goes by the grand name of National Road 1. In a country with one of the world’s worst road networks, it stands out for a simple reason: It’s paved. Still, there are few streetlights, and accidents are common. Pedestrians and cyclists share the route, transporting food and other goods to Kolwezi, Likasi, and Lubumbashi—cities along the way founded by Belgian colonists near Congo’s biggest mines.
The road runs past dozens of communities that have mostly missed out on the rewards of Congo’s multibillion-dollar mining industry. Makeshift shacks with orange tarpaulin roofs—the same plastic sheets used to keep hand-dug tunnels from collapsing in the rain—signal the homes of Congolese leading migratory lives on the economic fringes of one of the world’s poorest countries, where three-quarters of the population subsists on less than $1.90 a day, the international poverty line.

Judith Kasongo works as a cook and cleaner in Kanyaka, a village along the toll road. She has no clean water to wash her food. “It’s beyond understanding, and as a Congolese it hurts to see all this wealth go outside the country, as we remain in poverty,” says Kasongo, 31. “We see our minerals developing other countries, while in Congo we don’t have enough roads and face so many difficulties.”

In pictures posted on his Twitter feed, Jules Alingete Key looks more like a general than an auditor. He’s often scowling, and he sometimes wears a uniform the sky-blue color of Congo’s flag, accented with epaulets and gold buttons. Alingete is President Tshisekedi’s inspector general of finance, or, as one Congolese magazine described him, “the sheriff of finance and the public good.” He has become an anticorruption crusader, launching investigations into politicians and businessmen who were untouchable under Kabila. He says he faces constant threats from his targets.

As part of his investigations, Alingete has dug into who really profited from Congo’s most important roads. They were supposed to benefit the country as a whole. There would be at least $1.1 billion worth of new and refurbished toll roads: two connected segments in the Katanga region and another from Kinshasa to the country’s main port of Matadi.

Instead, a large portion of the $757 million in tolls collected on the mining route from 2010 through 2020 vanished, according to the inspector general’s office. On one leg of the highway, in a five-and-a-half-year period starting in 2015, maintenance spending amounted to only $50 million, less than one-fifth of what was generated in tolls during that time, his auditors found. The inspector general’s conclusion: Hundreds of millions of dollars have been lost to overbilling and embezzlement. “On the ground, these funds were not used for roads,” the agency told the consortium, describing a “mechanism of overcharging.”

Alingete identified the culprits: the two toll operators, which were entitled to keep only 10% of the fees collected. One, a company called Société de Gestion Routière du Congo, or SGR, misappropriated $121 million from April 2015 through 2020, according to an audit report seen by the consortium and verified by Alingete.

The Kabilas have a long association with SGR. So does Cong, the Chinese businessman. China Railway initially owned SGR in a joint venture with the Kabila family investment firm, which took full control in April 2015, records show. Yet, 10 days before that ownership change, Cong had represented the company in renewing its toll concession with the Congolese government. He says that SGR’s absent legal representative, who was a senior China Railway manager, had authorized him to sign the contract.

Cong says he acquired SGR in November 2016, though Congo’s corporate registry didn’t reflect the transfer until this year, after the consortium sent him questions. He said he paid the Kabilas no money and instead assumed an undisclosed amount of debt that the presidential family’s company owed China Railway. Cong didn’t provide any documentation for the transaction or the debt.
In that same five-and-a-half-year period, $117 million disappeared from the road’s other toll operator, Société de Gestion de Péage au Congo, or Sopeco, Alingete’s auditors found in a separate report. Cong owns that company, too. The audits don’t cover what happened before 2015, though most of the funds intended for roadwork also “went up in smoke” in the preceding years, the inspector general’s office found.
Like SGR, Sopeco has ties to the Kabilas. From 2013 through January 2016, the two toll operators made 44 payments worth a total of $10.4 million to a company called Congo Construction Co., which delivered more than $30 million to people and entities directly linked to the Kabilas,

Bloomberg reported in November. Almost all the money from the toll-road businesses was withdrawn from BGFI in cash, documents show.
“These payments created clear conflicts of interest and serious risks of fraud and bribery,” according to a report by the Sentry, a Washington-based anticorruption group that was part of the “Congo Hold-Up” consortium.
BGFI’s Congo unit was itself a Kabila family business: The former president’s brother was its chief executive officer, and his sister owned 40% of the bank until 2018, when both were forced out amid accumulating scandals resulting from an earlier data leak by a whistleblower. Before her shares were reclaimed by BGFI’s Gabonese headquarters, Kabila’s sister drew up an abortive plan to sell her stake to three new shareholders, including Cong, who would have paid $2.9 million for a 7.5% interest, bank records show. Cong said he wasn’t aware of such a proposal. In a statement after publication of the first “Congo Hold-Up” stories, the bank acknowledged past governance problems at its Congo branch but questioned the authenticity of the leaked documents.

The consortium found no indications that the Kabila-linked company, Congo Construction, or CCC, did any construction work. Cong said two Sopeco transfers to CCC’s account at BGFI were for a loan agreement and a gravel supply deal, but he didn’t know why SGR sent almost $8 million to the company, because the payments occurred before he took over the business. Cong has other connections to CCC, which was owned by another Chinese businessman. His hotel and the company share the same address. In an email, a bank official described CCC and the Fleuve Congo Hotel “as sister companies housed in the same building.”

Bloomberg couldn’t verify all the figures from the government reports, and Alingete didn’t respond to multiple requests for the complete audit documents. In emails to the consortium, Cong denied the inspector general’s allegations, saying he’d provided documentation showing all the money was spent appropriately, and he considers the matter closed.
L’Agence Congolaise des Grands Travaux, the government agency that oversees most of Congo’s biggest infrastructure projects, including toll roads, told the consortium it isn’t aware that either toll-road company engaged “in any cases of corruption or other improprieties.” But, according to the audit reports, Alingete has urged the government to cancel the contracts held by Sopeco and SGR and replace them with “a much more responsible partner.”

In the waning days of the Kabila administration, Cong won extensions on his concessions to collect tolls on the mineral highway. The bounty would continue into 2025 for one stretch of road and to 2043 on the other, the audits reveal. The companies also signed contracts for tolls and roadwork on two other mineral supply routes that could amount to half a billion dollars.
Alingete’s investigation could threaten Cong’s franchise. But for now, his contracts survive, and business has never been better. Congo’s mining ministry reported last year that copper exports were on track to break all records.
(By William Clowes and Michael Kavanagh)

Sino-Congolese contract: this file is brandished to divert the people from the essential (Ferdinand Kambere)

Splattered once again by the monstrous investigations of the General Inspectorate of Finance on the way in which the Sino-Congolese contract was managed under Joseph Kabila, the response from the shepherd to the shepherdess was not long in coming.

In a long interview granted to Objectif Infos CD, the Deputy Permanent Secretary of the PPRD, Ferdinand Kambere Kalumbi, set the record straight, at a time when the dossier is the chou-gras of politicians in need of notoriety and of the online media. as pro-power classics.

From the outset, the former Minister of Labour, Employment and Social Welfare first retraces the context in which China signed this win-win contract with the Congolese government of the time, which was intended to "rebuild a new society.

"Jules Alingete recognizes that this Chinese contract was signed when no partner was ready and able to come and invest its resources in GECAMINES because it was in a state of bankruptcy", loose Ferdinand Kambere answering the question of your media on line.

Former member of the Muzito government, Ferdinand Kambere indicates that "despite the reforms they were able to put in place at the portfolio level, no partner was ready to invest in Congolese companies as they have heavy liabilities with Regideso, SNEL, SNCC”, he still remembers like yesterday.

Indeed, the SPA of the PPRD specifies that it is in view of this reality with which Joseph Kabila was confronted, that he came to resort to the Chinese way.

The best formula of power at the time was to create the consortium of companies called "SICOMINES", which was to manage the funds and the projects following a proposal from the government, contrary to what we see under the Tshisekedi regime where “money from the public treasury falls into the pockets of presidential advisers and is systematically embezzled”.

Ferdinand Kambere remains speechless in the face of the power of Félix Tshisekedi, who is distinguished by the setting up of fanciful projects whose colossal sums are immediately "squandered" after their disbursement.

Ferdinand Kambere rather judges the behavior of the Inspector General of Finance, contrasts with the methods and practices to which the rulers of today engage in complete indifference and even in contempt of the law in force in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

“That he [Jules Alingete] stop behaving like a simple militant of the UDPS, because article 193 of our constitution gives an apolitical character to anyone who is part of the public administration.

We can see that he is instrumentalizing the file to give some advantage to this regime so that the population does not ask questions about the diversions they are making and the suffering that they cause the population with the inflation of the rate, the financial mismanagement and the trial and error in the management of security in the East of the country”, he declared alluding to those who are in power today.

Moreover, Ferdinand Kambere charges the power in place as the one who manages SICOMINES and who benefits from productions estimated at thousands of US dollars.

“It was from 2016 that they started the first productions, but the first and real production, which brought in thousands of dollars, dates back to 2019 and 2020,” he remarked.

The former President of the Republic, Joseph Kabila has nothing to do with this hot file to smear it and divert the population from the essentials.

“We must rather congratulate Joseph Kabila who agreed to engage in this scheme to raise the economy of the country.

He does not benefit from it today, it is they who behave like enjoyers of the sweat of others who have prepared the ground by showing patience even if it happens afterwards.

It is the same with the mining code, which gives its necessary impact, was prepared in pain by Joseph Kabila.

This man needs respect,” concluded this licensed Kabiliste and second personality of the PPRD.

“The people will hold their leaders to account if they have failed to vote for a project.

Who is the partner who will continue to give money to people who you are sure are gone as soon as they put in their pocket?


Ferdinand Kambere remains zen and does not bite his fingers, because he firmly believes that Kabila's management is not to be compared to that of Félix Tshisekedi, who gets lost in trial and error and whose specter of command does not useless anymore.

mediacongo

WTF !!!.jpeg



Public finances look good, the Congolese look gray

How not to shout hallelujah or pop the champagne - it depends on the stock market - when Minister Nicoilas Kazadi recites the string of flattering figures for public finances for 2022?

A pink year synonymous with green financial indicators.

Increased treasury revenue by more than 24%. On the exchange rate side, the depreciation of the Congolese franc against the dollar did not even reach 1% on annual average.

"We are on the right track", concludes, IMF forecasts of 8.5% growth over the shoulder for this year, the national treasurer.

Who can blame the Minister of Finance for practicing the sacrosanct principle of communication “doing it well and letting it be known”?

Who can be offended that Nicolas Kazadi declines the quote of the novelist-playwright Alfred Capus namely "well-ordered charity begins and ... continues by itself"?

The fact remains that if they are perceptible by white collar workers and more generally by the Congolese jet set, the "performances" of the Minister of Finance have no echo in the real country.

Lack of a social respondent.

This is indeed the Achilles heel of this stability of the macro-economic framework sung to the tunes by successive governments since the very distant Kengo.

It is therefore old this chronicle - all in contrast - of public finances which look good in the face of Congolese who look gray.

Numbers.

Again and again figures to make your mouth water. Good accounts certainly, but the average Congolese does not find his account.

It's like he doesn't even count.

What is, ultimately, the relevance, better the legitimacy of the figures (budget, growth rate, exchange rate, inflation, foreign exchange reserves, etc.) if the ordinary life of the greatest number does not improve?

Worse, even degrades?

When will the mutatis mutandis adaptation of the quote from Baron Louis be adapted to the Congolese context with this formula:

"Do good politics for us, I will do good social work for you".

For the silent majority, the numbers ended up being disembodied.

The only thing that counts, in fact, is the social whose basic gauge is the belly which, hungry, has no ears to listen even less to the broken record of economic and financial performances.

mediacongo


things-that-make-you-go-hmm.jpg



Food for thought on the long and winding Road to Manono :unsure:

Frank :confused:
 
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Frank

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Just playing devils advocate here but wouldn’t they just burn a billboard to the ground hours after it going up?

Like they did with this one :)

Kabila.jpg
 
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Spikerama

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Like they did with this one :)

View attachment 30612

Doesn't look burnt to me. Just looks like it has been badly installed and copped a but of wind. Which is a common problem in these types of places. Not the wind but the shoddy workmanship.
 
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BEISHA

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A bit over a week and a half ago we sent a combined effort letter to the AFR regarding the biased and compromised reporting of Tommy the twat and the serious errors and omissions in his articles regarding AVZ

Thank you to all who made contributions and suggestions for the content and also those who reviewed the various drafts....very much appreciated everyone

The letter was signed off by myself, ptlas and Dazmac66

For the record we received no response from the AFR so one can assume they couldn't give a rats or didn't want to acknowledge the issues raised

For those that are interested a copy of the letter is posted below

Feel free to use all or parts of the letter for your own purposes if it is helpful in any way

Cheers



Sent to the editor of the AFR:-


Dear Sir / Madam,

We would like to make a formal complaint about Tom Richardson of the AFR and his recent articles regarding AVZ Minerals. The 'stories' are extremely one sided, overly suggestive and have a number of factual errors or omissions.

For background AVZ Minerals (AVZ) is an Australian domiciled company that through its subsidiary AVZ International Pty Ltd holds a majority interest in the entity Dathcom Mining which has rightfully and legally secured tenement PE 13359 in the region of Manono in the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC).

The tenement PE 13359 in Manono contains what is currently considered to be the world’s largest, known, hard rock, Lithium resource.

AVZ and its management have worked extensively to legally obtain the mining rights in relation to PE 13359 working closely with the DRC government, all relevant authorities, always adhering to the DRC mining code and at all times applying the provisions and guidelines of the DRC anti-corruption policy throughout its dealings and operations in country.

We would specifically like bring to your attention that over the last 6 years in the DRC, AVZ (in relation to the development of the Manono Lithium resource) has carried out the following activities:
  • Soil Sampling
  • Field Mapping
  • Consulting
  • Drilling
  • Metallurgical Testing
  • Completing a FEED Study
  • Environmental Study and Impact Assessment Reports including Groundwater Management
  • Completion of a 160 page Definitive Feasibility Study
  • Liaising with the DRC Government with respect to a Special Economic Zone (“SEZ”) Agreement
  • Tendering for Mining Infrastructure
  • Legally Obtaining and Paying for an Increased Share of Dathcom Mining
  • Obtaining Several Offtake Agreements for both Lithium and Tin
  • Raising Capital, Negotiating Funding with Pan African DFI’s and a Funding and Offtake Agreement with CATH
  • Presenting at the Battery Minerals Conference
  • Legally Fulfilling all Requirements to Obtain the Mining License via Dathcom Mining
  • Including Receiving the Ministerial Decree to Award the Mining License and producing an 85 page Sustainability Report
  • Investing over $100 million dollars in furthering the project; and
  • Supporting the Local Community
Additionally, we note that the DRC state owned company, Cominiere, is working with the Minister of Mines, the Minister of Portfolio and the Director General of the DRC Mining Cadastre (CAMI) to effectively deny granting AVZ Minerals a mining license through its majority interest in Dathcom Mining held by its subsidiary AVZ International Pty Ltd.

The actions these participants are currently undertaking are explicitly in non-compliance with the DRC mining code and are blocking the rightful issue of the mining license. It should be noted that via official ministerial decree the mining license has effectively already been granted to AVZ, again this is through the majority interest in Dathcom Mining held by its subsidiary AVZ International Pty Ltd.

The actions of these participants has also allowed a Chinese company "Zijin" to fraudulently acquire 15% of Dathcom Mining for a fraction of its determined value as stated in the DRC Inspector General of Finance report released by the 'Inspection Générale des Finances' (IGF) headed by Jules Alingete.

The detailed accomplishments by AVZ and the results of the DRC Inspector General of Finance report were not commented on by Tom Richardson in any of his articles, to allow readers a fair and un-biased view of the Company.

We note the recent ruling against the AFR for very similar reporting where Justice Anna Katzmann found that the articles were "spiced with an account of suspicious circumstances" against a politician. And that, "The ordinary reasonable reader is prone to loose thinking and reads between the lines. And that is precisely what the respondents encouraged them to do. This article was awash with innuendo."

While we encourage the truth to be reported about ongoing events, we would expect these reports to be factual and unbiased without leading the readers to a specific view or opinion – including a fact-check and review on the sources/tip offs that journalists may receive.

Additionally, it has come to our attention that there may be a relationship between Tom Richardson and short sellers that could well be considered as colluding. The concern is that the journalist may be using their position and influence to benefit the short sellers and negatively impact the companies or assets they are reporting on. This type of behaviour raises serious ethical questions and could lead to the dissemination of false or misleading information.

Furthermore, we are concerned about the lack of disclosure of this relationship between Tom Richardson and the short sellers. Financial journalists have a duty to disclose any conflicts of interest to ensure that their reporting is impartial and trustworthy. The lack of disclosure in this case could be interpreted as an attempt to conceal the relationship and further undermine the credibility of financial journalism.

In relation to the preceding disclosure matters it has become abundantly clear through the content of Tom Richardson’s articles that there is an undeniable connection between the material he uses as reference and information published/provided/leaked by the veiled and secretive short selling entity Boatman Capital. The complete lack of disclosure regarding this connection and the serious implications contained therein are inherently disturbing.

We note that our concerns are in accordance with the following paragraphs of the Charter of Editorial Independence, as noted on the AFR’s website:

  1. That Nine publicly declare a commitment to the fundamental and longstanding principle of editorial independence.
  2. That Nine acknowledges that journalists, artists and photographers must record the affairs of the city, state, nation and the world fairly, fully and regardless of any commercial, political or personal interests, including those of any proprietors, shareholders or board members.
  3. That the editors must at all times carry out their duties in a way that preserves the independence and integrity of the mastheads.


We respectfully request the AFR investigate and review the serious matters raised in this letter.

Regards,
A great letter compilation Wino !!

Unfortunately , journalism of today, isnt what it used to be back in my day, where physical newspapers were all the rage, massive advertisement revenue enabled multiple journalists to work on each publication to provide credibility / variety, now its mainly online news, advertising revenue minimal, one journo per publication...........copy & paste.

Thats the new reality.


imo
 
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BEISHA

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Felix once said show me the evidence. We have the IGF reports as evidence, however the chinese have attempted to discredit them. The IGF reports, in the eyes of Felix could be considered as conflicted as they have been commissioned by the ruling party. In terms of the election if Felix acted on those reports, it could be seen unjust. As such I believe Felix may be waiting for the ICC case.
If the ICC was to here the case in April then the facts will come out. It would be more embarrassing for the chinese if they were to lose. If AVZ were to win this would provide third party evidence of corrupt actions by his government which he could then act on and be seen to be acting without prejudice. This can also be said in respect to the relationship with china. Blame the chinese companies not the chinese government. IMO, but what would I know.
Just because the ICC arbitration hearing is in April, doesnt mean you will get a verdict anytime soon imo........could be another 6 months or more, which is time FT can ill afford to twiddle his thumbs waiting for...........election is only 9 months away and the commoners have been waiting 3+ yrs for him to pull his finger out and actually do something about his corruption mandate.

IGF report is from a NGO, it may be funded by the govt , but its also meant to be independent of the govt, just like the ROYAL COMMISSION is meant to be in Australia.

Fucking act on the IGF report FELIX !!!

What are you waiting for ??????

The evidence is clear you KUNT !!!!


clock-watch.gif


patience.gif


royal shit show.gif
 
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TDITD

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@JAG @TDITD and everyone else who is using the campaign assets.

French version of Adele is up now.

Excellent just went on a rampage, this time more targeted but,

My personal favourite was to ...

I hope she knows french!
Screenshot_20230225_231315_Twitter.jpg
 
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BEISHA

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Spikerama

Regular
Just because the ICC arbitration hearing is in April, doesnt mean you will get a verdict anytime soon imo........could be another 6 months or more, which is time FT can ill afford to twiddle his thumbs waiting for...........election is only 9 months away and the commoners have been waiting 3+ yrs for him to pull his finger out and actually do something about his corruption mandate.

IGF report is from a NGO, it may be funded by the govt , but its also meant to be independent of the govt, just like the ROYAL COMMISSION is meant to be in Australia.

Fucking act on the IGF report FELIX !!!

What are you waiting for ??????

The evidence is clear you KUNT !!!!


View attachment 30616

View attachment 30618

View attachment 30619

Dude to be perfectly frank (not that @Frank). No point in shouting in to the wilderness here. No one is listening except us converted,

Get on the bird. Get on the turd. Whatever media you can where there are lots of eyeballs interested in the topic and spam the the muther fucken shit out of it.

Maybe you already have. I don't know because you're name doesn't pop up and you might be someone different on other social media.

But honestly. In here. We are just talking in circles. And no one cares but us.
 
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Spikerama

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Excellent just went on a rampage, this time more targeted but,

My personal favourite was to ...

I hope she knows french!
View attachment 30620
Very good mate. Please download and use the spell corrected English version also.


Message me you twitter handle so I can follow you.
 
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Winenut

Go AVZ!
Big shout out to all the dudes putting in the hard yards getting the message out on the bird and in those social media circle thingys that are a mystery to me

You are getting LOTS of eyeballs over the issues and the awareness and momentum is growing by the minute

You can really feel it!

I can feel it!

I tell you where I can feel it.....

1677338539418.gif


In all seriousness huge thanks to the social media crew (you know who you are;)) and especially to @Spikerama who seems to have a fair bit of savvy when it comes to all that stuff!
 
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Samus

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:unsure:

Without a known mining deposit in Manono, Zijin built a Chinese camp there. Who from the government and Cominiere can explain this? (Civil Society)
 
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Samus

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SEZ) Special Economic Zone for lithium and batteries, with the Australians, the Chinese or the Americans and the Zambians?​

February 25, 2023
Kiki Kienge

By Kiki Kienge
This is following a tweet from the Minister of Industry of the DR Congo, Julien Paluku after a tete-a-tete with the Chinese Ambassador to the DR Congo, Zhu Jing in order to guarantee the interests of Chinese companies in the DR Congo. That a large number of Congolese have called for caution and vigilance on the creation of a Chinese Special Economic Zone (SEZ), for the development of a value chain of lithium electric batteries in Manono.

What is a special economic zone?
Special Economic Zones (SEZs) are free zones often created by the central government, at the scale of a port, a district or a city, functioning as economic and fiscal enclaves.
A geographical region in which the economic laws are more liberal and advantageous for the companies which settle there, than those in the rest of the country. The SEZ offers a combination of tax incentives, favorable customs duties, simplified customs procedures and limited regulations.
Why this concern of the Congolese on the Chinese SEZ?
Recently in the DR Congo we are witnessing negative revelations of an economic nature, mostly from Chinese companies. Finally it was the report of the General Inspectorate of Finance (IGF) under the batons of the chief inspector, Jules Alingete who revealed the underside of the figures of the Sino-Congolese contract, a barter signed in 2008 under the regime of Joseph Kabila between the DR Congo and a consortium of Chinese companies.

Manono ZES (AVZ), Chinese ZES (CATL) and the DRC/USA/Zambia value chain
Upstream on the development of Manono lithium which will be exploited in Tanganiyka by Dathcom, a joint venture between the Congolese State with COMINIERE and the Australians of AVZ Minerals, we must talk about the special economic zone of Manono, a concept of AVZ Minerals with Dathcom for the recovery and proper exploitation of lithium and tin from Manono.
In short, below are some passages from the AVZ Minerals press release of February 18, 2020 after the meeting between its representatives in DR Congo with that of the Congolese government, the Minister of Industry Julien Paluku;
AVZ signs a memorandum of understanding with the Ministry of Industry to create a
special economic zone in Manono
  • AVZ has signed a memorandum of understanding with the Congolese government to create a special economic zone in Manono, Tanganyika province, DRC.
  • The special economic zone has the potential to present significant economic benefits for business development and profitability. significant economic benefits to the development and profitability of the Manono lithium and tin project, including exemptions or reductions on corporate income tax and customs duties.
  • AVZ Minerals Limited (ASX: AVZ, “the Company”) is pleased to announce that AVZ has signed a Memorandum of Understanding (“MoU”) with the Ministry of Industry for the development of a extraction of lithium and tin.
  • The objective of the memorandum of understanding is to establish the conditions for collaboration and negotiation between the Ministry of Industry and AVZ with a view to establishing the "Special Economic Zone of Manono" in the province of Tanganyika and the development of basic infrastructure in this area.
  • The defined geographical area will initially include all essential infrastructure such as water, electricity (the Mpiana Mwanga hydroelectric installation) and health services. electricity (Mpiana Mwanga hydroelectric plant) and roads, including the Manono Lithium and Tin project licenses (PR13359, PR4029 and PR4030) to facilitate successful mining.
AVZ Managing Director Nigel Ferguson said: “We are extremely excited about this major milestone for the Manono lithium and tin project (…)”
Julien Paluku , Minister of Industry, declared in particular: “We are very happy to be able to count on AVZ. Industry must now be a factor of stability and peace with the creation of wealth and jobs…”
To understand AVZ's press release, this Manono SEZ would not be linked to the electric battery value chain project, because AVZ Minerals is not a battery manufacturer.
AVZDownload
But the question arises when we look at the entry of the Chinese giant in the manufacture of batteries, CATL with 24% in AVZ Minerals for a possibility of developing Manono's lithium and why not the manufacture of batteries in the future.
But now in Minister Julien Paluku's Tweet, there is talk of another Chinese SEZ with the same CATL operated in AVZ Minerals for the development of a project in the value chain of Manono's lithium electric batteries.
In addition to the two possible SEZs linked to lithium, from Manono with AVZ/CATL and the Chinese SEZ, there is also the zone to be created in Haut Katanga on the basis of the agreement between the same government of DR Congo, of Zambia and the United States for the manufacture of Manono's lithium-bonded batteries.

 
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Samus

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#RDCongo #DRCongo : I have just finished reading the summary report of #IGF_RDC on the management of the mining assets of #RDC by the public company #COMINIERE_SA , to understand the complaint of $AVZ . First thing, the agents of the State, do as they please (1/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : #COMINIERE_SA sold 15% of its shares in violation of the law #congolaise to #Zijing at $33,440,000 on a value assessed at 154,200,000 causing the State to lose #congolais 120,760 .000$!! Who can understand this logic? (2/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : All the $33,440,000 fruits of the illegal sale of shares of #COMINIERE_SA went directly into the pockets of the managers of #COMINIERE_SA , their consultants and nothing to revive the operation. In short, nothing for the people (3/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : We ask the President #Tshisekedi who is looking for investments #Win_Win , to take a personal interest in the file of #COMINIERE_SA and $AVZ which highlights the architecture of corruption within public enterprises (4/4)
 
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TDITD

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Very good mate. Please download and use the spell corrected English version also.


Message me you twitter handle so I can follow you.
Paul@TDITDistaken
 
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#RDCongo #DRCongo : I have just finished reading the summary report of #IGF_RDC on the management of the mining assets of #RDC by the public company #COMINIERE_SA , to understand the complaint of $AVZ . First thing, the agents of the State, do as they please (1/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : #COMINIERE_SA sold 15% of its shares in violation of the law #congolaise to #Zijing at $33,440,000 on a value assessed at 154,200,000 causing the State to lose #congolais 120,760 .000$!! Who can understand this logic? (2/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : All the $33,440,000 fruits of the illegal sale of shares of #COMINIERE_SA went directly into the pockets of the managers of #COMINIERE_SA , their consultants and nothing to revive the operation. In short, nothing for the people (3/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : We ask the President #Tshisekedi who is looking for investments #Win_Win , to take a personal interest in the file of #COMINIERE_SA and $AVZ which highlights the architecture of corruption within public enterprises (4/4)

Very big political influencer in the DRC who is always campaigning on corruption with over 85k followers On twitter. Finally understanding the corruption that Zijin and DRC ministers and is calling for the president to respond. The fight needs to be on social media to get the truth out
 
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#RDCongo #DRCongo : I have just finished reading the summary report of #IGF_RDC on the management of the mining assets of #RDC by the public company #COMINIERE_SA , to understand the complaint of $AVZ . First thing, the agents of the State, do as they please (1/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : #COMINIERE_SA sold 15% of its shares in violation of the law #congolaise to #Zijing at $33,440,000 on a value assessed at 154,200,000 causing the State to lose #congolais 120,760 .000$!! Who can understand this logic? (2/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : All the $33,440,000 fruits of the illegal sale of shares of #COMINIERE_SA went directly into the pockets of the managers of #COMINIERE_SA , their consultants and nothing to revive the operation. In short, nothing for the people (3/4)

#RDCongo #DRCongo : We ask the President #Tshisekedi who is looking for investments #Win_Win , to take a personal interest in the file of #COMINIERE_SA and $AVZ which highlights the architecture of corruption within public enterprises (4/4)
”Now, off to sleep little johnny” said Dad.
”but you missed the last page!” responded Johnny. “What happened after the blatant grift and corruption was exposed by the IGF?”
”oh” said dad, casually flipping to the last page as he had meant to skip it all along.
”Nothing - it says “nothing”. Sensing he’d missed something in the tiny text he pulled the book in really close. He squinted hard and continued:
“Got it!, he said. “A B S O L U T E L Y F U C K I N G N O T H I N G !”
They both looked blankly at each other for a moment before dad said “Good night Johnny. Same story again tomorrow?”.
“Not sure” said the now irritated Johnny. “They sound like kunts, and i’m tiring of this shit-fuckery”.
Now by the doorway dad replied “we’ll see what tomorrow brings then, hey?” And with that he flicked the light switch and closed the door.
 
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JAG

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@TDITD

I think we have smashed a new twitter record for the most amount of posts. HAHAHAHAAHHA

Happy Jim Carrey GIF
 
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Spikerama

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@TDITD

I think we have smashed a new twitter record for the most amount of posts. HAHAHAHAAHHA

Happy Jim Carrey GIF
New timecode for ICC date now up

 
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TDITD

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@TDITD

I think we have smashed a new twitter record for the most amount of posts. HAHAHAHAAHHA

Happy Jim Carrey GIF
Teamwork makes the dream work
High Five Well Done GIF by TOPTEMP
 
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