Australian Police Expand Cambodia Probe of OZ Minerals
Cambodia Daily | 18 April 2016
Authorities in Australia have expanded the scope of their
investigation into bribery allegations involving the relatives of
Cambodian government officials and the former Cambodian operations of
Australian miner OZ Minerals, the firm has announced.
It follows a recent announcement from the Australian Federal Police
(AFP) that it has opened a fresh—unrelated—probe into a possible bribe
the Australian gaming firm Tabcorp may have paid a Cambodian consultancy
connected to a sister of Prime Minister Hun Sen.
In its latest annual report to shareholders, released last week, OZ
Minerals says it was informed by the AFP some time this year that it was
widening its ongoing investigation into the firm’s 2009 buyout of a
corporate partner in a mining project in Mondolkiri province.
“The AFP is continuing its investigation and OZ Minerals is
continuing to cooperate with the AFP. OZ Minerals has concluded that it
is not probable that a present obligation exists and, accordingly, no
provision has been recognised in the balance sheet at 31 December 2015.”
Neither OZ Minerals or the AFP replied to requests for comment about the expanded investigation.
After abandoning an initial probe of OZ Minerals’ Mondolkiri deal in
2012 due to “insufficient information,” the AFP reopened the case the
next year following a critical report from the Organization for Economic
Cooperation and Development. The organization said it was concerned
that the Australian police may have closed the case “before thoroughly
investigating the allegations.”
The case involves a total of $1.15 million OZ Minerals paid to four
shareholders of Shin Ha Mining, a local concern and business partner it
was buying out to gain full control of a gold exploration project in
Mondolkiri.
Of the total, $923,077 went to three women with relatives high up in
the Ministry of Industry, Mines and Energy, which has since been split
in two.
Sok Sunnary, the mother-in-law of Electricite du Cambodge director
Keo Rattanak, the ministry’s cabinet chief at the time of the joint
venture in 2006, received $461,539 for her 10 percent stake. Sar Sa Um
and Sok Sovanchivy each held 5 percent of Shin Ha and received $230,769.
Ms. Sa Um was identified in an internal Shin Ha email as the
mother-in-law of a director at the ministry’s general department of
mineral resources. Ms. Sovanchivy was identified in the email as the
daughter of the department’s director-general.
Both OZ Minerals and ministry officials have denied any wrongdoing.
OZ sold its Mondolkiri resources to another Australian miner, Renaissance Minerals, in 2012.
In a separate case, BHP Billiton reported last year that it, too, was
cooperating with an AFP investigation into allegations that it had paid
an unofficial commission to Cambodian officials. The mining company is
suspected of paying officials at least $1.35 million in “tea money” in
2006 to secure a license to explore for Bauxite, also in Mondolkiri.
In March, the AFP confirmed that it was investigating yet another
case involving Cambodia. It followed Australian media reports that
gaming firm Tabcorp paid $200,000 to an unnamed consultancy tied to one
of Mr. Hun Sen’s sisters while exploring the possibility of securing an
online gaming license here.
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