(Kitco News) - Winshear Gold (TSX-V: WINS) announced Thursday that it has filed its Memorial with the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes, a part of the World Bank group, outlining the nature and quantum of its claims against Tanzania for the expropriation of the company's retention licences over the SMP gold project, located in SW Tanzania.
The company said that Tanzania's expropriation of the SMP gold project breached its obligations under the 2013 Tanzania-Canada Bilateral Investment Treaty, which protects investors against developments that included expropriation.
The company noted that the Memorial provides the basis for compensation to Winshear in the amount of C$124,781,945, including interest which continues to accrue.
CEO Richard Williams commented, "Establishing C$124,781,945 as compensation for Tanzania's expropriation of the SMP gold project is a very important milestone for Winshear. Tanzania's actions have rendered valueless years of investment in the country. We have made every attempt to work with the Tanzanian Government to reach an amicable settlement since they cancelled our retention licences but they have provided us no choice but to pursue the legal route."
Between 2006 – 2017 the company acquired, explored and discovered a gold resource at the SMP gold project. As of 2017, the company held four retention licences which contained the entire mineral resource defined to that date.
The company said that in July 2017, without any consultation with industry participants and investors, the Government of Tanzania passed new legislation abolishing the retention licence classification. On December 19 & 20, 2019, the Government of Tanzania put all of the area formerly held by Winshear under retention licences out to tender, thereby completing the expropriation of the SMP gold project. - Vladimir Basov, Kitco News
Uganda is Africa’s largest refugee hosting nation, where 1.45 million refugees mostly from South Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Burundi and Somalia live. The country has a generous policy towards displaced persons: its 2006 Refugee Act guarantees refugees the right to work, freedom of movement and the right to live in settlements rather than in refugee camps.
The country’s progressive approach has enabled the inclusion of refugees in Uganda Refugee High Frequency Phone Surveys (URHFPS) by UNHCR, the World Bank, and the Uganda Bureau of Statistics. The URHFPS tracked the impacts of the pandemic on a roughly monthly basis across three rounds between October/November 2020 and February/March 2021. The survey results are presented in Monitoring Socio-economic Impacts of Covid-19 on Refugees in Uganda (Round 1, 2, and 3). URHFPS was conducted in parallel with the COVID-19 High Frequency Phone Survey of Ugandan population, which enables us to compare the impact of COVID-19 on households in both groups.
It is clear from the final round of the phone surveys that refugees are faring substantially worse on key dimensions of welfare, and their recovery is slow compared with Ugandans in general . The post-COVID-19 recovery for refugees will be fragile, amidst a projected return to growth for Uganda in 2021. The evidence shows that refugees will require continued and strengthened support during and after the pandemic to escape the “poverty trap” that can have a lasting impact across several generations.
According to three rounds of the URHFPS, the poverty rate among refugees is projected to be around 50 percent, higher than the pre-COVID-19 level of 44 percent. Poverty rates are estimated not by collecting actual consumption data, but from around 10 simple questions added in the URHFPS questionnaire using a machine learning technique. Such an approach needed to be used because phone interviews cannot collect a long list of questions to collect full consumption data.
Employment rates fell among refugee respondents from 43 percent in October/November 2020 to 32 percent in February/March 2021. This widened the gap further from the pre-lockdown employment rate of 56 percent. The opposite was observed for the national employment rate for Ugandans, which returned to the pre-COVID-19 level of 86 percent over the same period (Figure 1).
For most refugee households, income levels have remained below the pre-March 2020 (Figure 2). Also, the pace of income recovery among refugees is significantly slower than that of non-refugees. Among income sources, income from family business recovered slowest in both refugee and non-refugee households compared to income from wage employment and family farming.
Exposure to shocks was much higher among refugees. Every refugee household experienced at least one shock between March 2020 and October/November 2020. In comparison, 42 percent of Ugandan households did not experience any shock between March and June 2020.
While the most severe forms of food insecurity among refugees declined slightly in February 2021 compared to October/November 2020, refugees continued to face very high levels of food insecurity. About 64 percent of refugees are food insecure compared with 9 percent of Ugandans . Reducing food consumption remained the most frequently used coping strategy.
Notably, more than half of refugee respondents reported experiencing depression compared to only 5 percent of Ugandans . Depression had a substantial negative impact on the respondents’ lives. For more than half of refugee respondents who had at least one depression symptom, it made life extremely or very hard.
Compared to Ugandans, the ability of refugee households to buy food, access sufficient drinking water, and access medicine and medical treatment were significantly lower. In February/March 2020 about 36 percent of refugee households did not have access to medicine when needed and were unable to access sufficient amounts of drinking water. In comparison, in February 2020 18 percent among Ugandans were not able to buy medicine when needed and only 2 percent of Ugandans faced scarcity in drinking water.
It will be necessary to deepen assistance to refugees and equally vulnerable members of the Ugandan host communities so that both communities are able to access economic opportunities as the country recovers from the crisis .
The key findings of these surveys and policy options are outlined in a joint policy brief which recommends:
Targeting business development support and private sector engagement
Addressing barriers to women’s economic empowerment
Addressing barriers to access to finance, including mobile money
Further supporting integrated service delivery to refugee and host communities and issues of social cohesion under the Comprehensive Refugee Response Framework
Prioritizing mental health support in skills development
Focus on returning children to school once they re-open
Promoting COVID-19 prevention efforts and supporting refugee’s integration into vaccination roll-out.
An earlier World Bank report Informing the Refugee Policy Response in Uganda recommends measures that could boost shared prosperity for both refugees and Ugandans. These include:
Raising the productivity of agricultural activities through the provision of inputs and extension services
Creating job opportunities in non-agricultural sectors
Increasing their chances of employment through training and skills programs
Investing in access to basic social services, using social groups and associations to implement refugee programs such as mentoring, skills training, and providing extension services, which will ensure that refugees continue to feel safe and welcome in Uganda.
- Aziz Atamanov/Theresa Beltramo/Peter Waita/Nobuo Yoshida, World Bank
President Salva Kiir Mayardit addressing the nation on 10th Independence Day in Juba at state house J1. Photo by presidency
JUBA – South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir Mayardit has ordered the ministries of finance and petroleum to dedicate at least 5,000 barrels of crude oil per day to the regularization of the civil servant’s salaries.
The president made the revelation on Wednesday while addressing the nation as the country marks ten years since obtaining its independence from neighboring Sudan following decades of war in 2011.
“Today, I am directing the two ministries, the ministry of finance and economic planning and that of Petroleum to dedicate 5,000 barrels of the Nile Blend to strengthen the financial spending of the government in order to regularized salaries salary and operation fund payment,” Kiir said.
As of today, one barrel of the Nile Blend crude oil is traded at $32.77 in the world market, meaning 5000 barrels of it is equivalent to 163,850 which would make $4,915,500 per month.
Since the outbreak of civil war in December 2013, civil servants could wait for several months before receiving their monthly salary which even does not cover for basic living costs.
The president revealed during the addressed that he has ordered a 100 percent increment of all civil servants’ salary, meaning a soldier who currently receives 1500 South Sudanese Pounds will now get 3000.
“In the 2021-2022 budget the government has resolved to increase salaries by 100% as phase one with immediate effect and will be fully reviewed later on during the financial year as the economy improve,” Kiir added. - Sudans Post
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