End-game looms in Boseto wrangle

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The eight-month wrangle for control of the 36,000 tonnes per annum Boseto Copper Project inched towards its end-game on Tuesday, with Discovery Metals announcing that change of control discussions had started with external parties.

The Australian firm, which commissioned Boseto last year after a seven-year effort, has been the subject of a hostile takeover by Chinese shareholder, Cathay Fortune Corporation (CFC), since last October.During the tussle for control, Discovery's share price dropped 85 percent on the Botswana Stock Exchange and by equally significant levels on its primary Australian Stock Exchange listing.Late last month, the Australian firm put itself up for sale after failing to win CFC's support for a plan to raise up to $245 million (P2.01 billion). The Chinese firm, founded by billionaire Yu Yong, currently holds 13.7 percent equity in Discovery and has tabled several offers for dominant control since October.

Last month, Discovery Metals announced it had signed confidentiality agreements "with a number of parties to date" and that it would be accepting binding proposals until June 10. The firm said it had opened its books to several bidders, including erstwhile suitor CFC."The board wishes to inform shareholders that Discovery Metals is in discussions with interested parties in relation to a potential transaction," the firm said in a statement on Tuesday."The board will update the market of material developments in due course. There can be no assurance that a transaction will occur."While the statement was mum on whether CFC was among the "interested parties", the Chinese firm recently tabled a new offer of between 35 and 40 Australian cents a share (P2.90 to P3.30), being significantly lower than the initial takeover offer of 1.70 Australian Dollars (P14.00) a share offered last October.Meanwhile, Discovery Metals on Wednesday revealed record metal production of 1,713 tonnes of copper and 75,348 ounces of silver from Boseto in May. The firm announced that overall copper and silver recoveries were measured at 84 and 91 percent respectively, while also noting record material movement of 3.24 million tonnes from the two operating open pits.

Editor's Comment
Closure as pain lingers

March 28 will go down as a day that Batswana will never forget because of the accident that occurred near Mmamatlakala in Limpopo, South Africa. The tragedy affected not only the grieving families but the nation at large. Batswana throughout the process stood behind the grieving families and the governments of Botswana and South Africa need much more than a pat on the back.Last Saturday was a day when family members said their last goodbyes to...

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