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Liberia signs billion dollar mining deal with China Union

File photo: 01 February 2007 shows a general view of the China-Liberia meeting led respectively by President Hu Jintao of China (C,L) and Liberia's President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf (C,R) at Monrovia's Presidential Residence. It is the first visit by a Chinese president to the small West African country, traditionally a close ally of the United States, battered by years of civil conflict which left it with neither electricity nor running water. Photo courtesy AFP.
by Staff Writers
Monrovia (AFP) Jan 22, 2009
Liberia signed Thursday a 2.6 billion dollar agreement with Chinese conglomerate China Union to develop its main iron ore mine, the biggest ever investment in the West African nation.

A government statement said President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf signed a mineral development agreement with officials from the Chinese mining company to develop the Bong Mines.

Sirleaf invited other Chinese companies to come and invest in the country, which emerged from a crippling 14-year civil war in 2003.

"The Liberian leader expressed the hope that the signing of the agreement will serve as a motivation to other Chinese companies to invest in Liberia," the statement said.

The deal has been sent to the parliament for ratification.

Liberia's Investment Minister Richard Tolbert announced in December that a deal was in the making with the Chinese mining giant, greeting it as the country's biggest ever investment.

He said China Union had promised that within 12 months it will have built a one-million-tonne-a-year capacity refining factory at the Bong iron mines, about 150 kilometers (95 miles) north of Monrovia.

He said 3,000 jobs would be created by the project with up to 15,000 following indirectly.

Before Liberia's 1989-2003 civil war, mines were run by a German concern, the Bong Mining Company. But it was criticised for not carrying out development projects in the region.

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First rebel attack on Central African army since peace talks: ministry
Bangui (AFP) Jan 20, 2009
Rebels attacked Central African Republic troops over the weekend in a region bordering Sudan, causing "several deaths" according to a defence ministry statement released Tuesday.







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