Mali bans infringing outfits from gold mining
Source: APA
Mali bans infringing outfits from gold mining
Of 222 valid search permits, the government has cancelled some 71 it had granted companies that have broken the terms of contract, the source added.
About 40 other permits are set for signature, the government said, adding that only six mining companies are currently active.
Gold, which has superseded crisis-stricken cotton to become Mali’s leading export in the last five years, is also facing a production slump.
The country is targeting a 46.013-tonne output in 2008 after producing 52.753 tonnes in 2007 and a record-high 58.382 tonnes two years earlier.
In 2006, the precious metal earned the country 116 billion CFA francs, the authorities recalled.
Mali is Africa’s third leading gold producer after world giants South Africa and Ghana.
Yet the enviable position has not in the least improved the lives of the Malians, the civil society recently denounced as they demanded greater “transparency” in managing gold-earned resources.
Mali: English twin town plans to improve life in Timbuktu
Source: BBC NEWS
![]() Timbuktu is one of the poorest cities in Mali
|
Improving education and health care provisions in Timbuktu is the aim of a group of doctors and teachers from its Welsh twin town, Hay-on-Wye. The Powys town was twinned with the city in the west African country of Mali, last year.
Three doctors and three teachers have now returned to Wales from a fact-finding visit to the city.
Their long-term plans include trying to open a new health centre, as well as provide basic education equipment.
Dr Julie Grigg, a GP at Hay-on-Wye Medical Centre, and her husband Steve Williams, a teacher, both went to Timbuktu to see for themselves what could be done.
“They’ve got a hospital there but it’s not well equipped,” said Dr Grigg.
“They’ve only got one full-time consultant as far as we could see.
“I want to raise enough money for another health centre out there.”
The health centre would cost around £60,000 to £100,000 and Dr Grigg admits it is more of a long-term aim.
But there is also a desperate need for basic health equipment in a city that is one of the poorest in Mali, which itself is one of the poorest countries in the world.
Equipment
“We’re going to send them some equipment such as stethoscopes and blood pressure machines,” said Dr Grigg.
Similarly, the Hay-on-Wye teachers have plans to equip schools in Timbuktu with computer equipment but, while that will take time, they can at least provide basic resources such as textbooks.
Steve Williams, a teacher Gwernyfed High School in Powys, said there were usually up to 100 pupils in each class in Timbuktu and there were very few resources for teachers.
“The need is so great there, the question is where to start really,” he said.
“Another reason for doing this is to inform our pupils that this is what it’s like for most people on the planet.”
Another twinning scheme involves selling crafts made in Timbuktu locally in Hay-on-Wye.
Sue Campbell-Felgate, a member of the twinning committee, said craftsmen were paid a fair price for their work with profits from the sales then put back into other projects that would benefit Timbuktu.
Hay-on-Wye certainly raised eyebrows when it twinned with the city, beating off stiff competition.
Timbuktu is already twinned with places in Germany, France, Morocco, Tunisia and the USA but officials also wanted a UK connection.
Villages, towns and cities from across the UK were invited to nominate themselves online.
And the twinning has certainly motivated many Hay-on-Wye residents to do their bit for Timbuktu.
Dr Grigg said: “We’re totally fired up about it. We just can’t let these people down.”











