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Gold/Mining/Energy : PAW - Pacific Wildcat Resources Corp

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From: TreKewl1/8/2026 2:10:28 PM
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Global race for rare earths comes to Kenya’s Mrima Hill



The Borneo Post (Sarawak)

8 Jan 2026

KWALE, Kenya: Divi­sion and sus­pi­cion have gripped five vil­lages near Kenya’s coast as global powers from the United States to China eye a forest that is rich in rare earths — min­er­als vital to high-tech and low-car­bon indus­tries.

The US gov­ern­ment under Pres­id­ent Don­ald Trump has made secur­ing crit­ical min­er­als cent­ral to its dip­lomacy in Africa, includ­ing through a peace deal in the resource-rich Demo­cratic Repub­lic of Congo this year.

Mrima Hill — a forest of around 390 acres near Kenya’s Indian Ocean coast­line — could be another tar­get.

It sits quietly on huge rareearth depos­its that Cortec Min­ing Kenya, a sub­si­di­ary of UK and Canada-based Pacific Wild­cat Resources, estim­ated in 2013 were worth US$62.4 bil­lion, includ­ing large stores of niobium, used to strengthen steel.

US offi­cial Marc Dillard vis­ited the hill in June when he was serving as the interim ambas­sador to Kenya.

Other for­eign­ers also attemp­ted to visit in recent months, includ­ing Chinese nation­als who were turned away, accord­ing to Juma Koja, a guard for the Mrima Hill com­munity.

An Aus­tralian con­sor­tium of min­ing firms RareX and Iluka Resources announced a bid this year to mine rare earths on the site, and loc­als say land spec­u­lat­ors are flock­ing to the area.

Bur­ied riches

The interest is wor­ry­ing the com­munity, mostly of the Digo eth­nic group, who fear they will be evicted or denied a share in future min­ing wind­falls.

The lush forest is home to their sac­red shrines and has long sup­por­ted farm­ing and live­li­hoods, though today more than half the pop­u­la­tion lives in extreme poverty, accord­ing to gov­ern­ment data.

AFP was ini­tially barred access to the forest.

“People come here with big cars... but we turn them away,” said Koja.

His stance stems from past encoun­ters with pro­spect­ive investors — a pro­cess he says was not trans­par­ent.

“I do not want my people to be exploited,” he said.

Kenya revoked a min­ing licence in 2013 that had been gran­ted to Cortec Min­ing Kenya, cit­ing envir­on­mental and licens­ing irreg­u­lar­it­ies.

Cortec claimed in court that the licence was revoked after it refused to pay a bribe to then ­min­ing min­is­ter Najib Balala, an alleg­a­tion he denied.

The com­pany lost mul­tiple legal efforts over the revoc­a­tion.

In 2019, Kenya imposed a tem­por­ary ban on new min­ing licences over con­cerns about cor­rup­tion and envir­on­mental degrad­a­tion.

But it now sees a major oppor­tun­ity, par­tic­u­larly as China — the biggest source of rare earths — increas­ingly lim­its its exports.

Kenya’s min­ing min­istry announced “bold reforms” this year, includ­ing tax breaks and improved licens­ing trans­par­ency, aimed at attract­ing investors and boost­ing the sec­tor from 0.8 per cent of GDP to 10 per­cent by 2030.

Daniel Weru Ichang’i, a retired eco­nomic geo­logy pro­fessor at the Uni­versity of Nairobi, said Kenya had a long way to go, espe­cially in gath­er­ing reli­able data on its resources.

“There’s a romantic view that min­ing is an easy area, and one can get rich quickly... We need to sober up,” he told AFP.

“Cor­rup­tion makes this area, which is very high-risk, less attract­ive to invest in.”

Com­pet­i­tion between the West and China is driv­ing up prices, but if the coun­try wants to profit, it “must stick to the law, and indi­vidual interests must be sub­jug­ated to that of the nation,” he said.

‘Mrima is our life’

On Mrima Hill, loc­als worry for their live­li­hoods, sac­red shrines, medi­cinal plants, and the forest they have known all their lives.

“This Mrima is our life... Where will we be taken?” said Mohammed Riko, 64, vice chair­man of the Mrima Hill Com­munity Forest Asso­ci­ation.

Koja is con­cerned about the loss of unique indi­gen­ous trees like the giant orchid, already a prob­lem before min­ing has even star­ted.

“In my heart I am cry­ing. This Mrima has endangered spe­cies that we are los­ing,” he said.

But oth­ers, like Dom­itilla Mueni, treas­urer of the Mrima Hill asso­ci­ation, see an oppor­tun­ity.

She has been devel­op­ing her land — plant­ing trees, farm­ing — in order to push up the value when min­ing com­pan­ies come to buy.

“Why should we die poor while we have min­er­als?” she said. — AFP
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