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Gold/Mining/Energy : SOUTHERNERA (t.SUF) -- Ignore unavailable to you. Want to Upgrade?


To: DavidA who wrote (1195)5/22/1998 1:58:00 AM
From: GULL  Respond to of 7235
 
It is not an implication.
De Beers hold the mineral rights to the M1 which they purchased off NGS.
They are the world leaders in all fields of diamond expertise and I fail to see why they should enter into a marketing venture with the rest of Klipspringer when they control the M1.



To: DavidA who wrote (1195)5/22/1998 6:50:00 AM
From: Ron S.  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 7235
 
SouthernEra and heirs settle their differences

Friday, May 22, 1998

By PETER KUITENBROUWER
The Financial Post

ÿSouthernEra Resources Ltd. of Toronto and its opponents, a group of
heirs, dropped their lawsuits yesterday over a South African diamond
cache.
ÿThe adversaries don't have a deal yet. Still, the end of the five-month fight before a South African court opens the way for a possible settlement to the dispute and has left diamond giant De Beers
Consolidated Mines Ltd. scrambling for its next move.
ÿ"We're tired of having end runs run around us," SouthernEra president
Chris Jennings said yesterday from Johannesburg.
ÿThe settlement removes legal obstacles to an expropriation of the site by South African Mines Minister Penuell Maduna, he said.
ÿ"The minister now has to decide whether we are the fair, legitimate
owners of the Marsfontein mineral rights," Jennings said.
ÿInvestors, however, responded by dumping SouthernEra shares (SUF/TSE),which dropped $1.25 to $7, 10› shy of its 52-week low.
ÿPatrick Evans, South African consul in Toronto, said Maduna has been in Europe and has not yet seen the latest SouthernEra request.
ÿ"The government is intent on a change in the mineral rights regime in
South Africa to ensure that individuals or corporations do not hold
mineral rights in perpetuity," Evans said.
ÿIn a letter last month to The Financial Post, Maduna said he would
fight in court for the right to turn over the Marsfontein rights to theCanadian-led group.
ÿIf South Africa expropriates the site, Jennings said SouthernEra will
pay the heirs 75 million rand ($21.3 million) in compensation.
ÿThat's the same amount offered by De Beers when it secured the heirs'
disputed rights last month.
ÿFor weeks SouthernEra and De Beers have been negotiating over the
rights. Among other points, De Beers wants SouthernEra to sell the
diamonds through its Central Selling Organization, which markets 70% of the world's diamonds. Those talks are now on hold.
ÿ"This doesn't mean there was a settlement between ourselves and
SouthernEra," De Beers spokesman Roger Van Eeghen said. "We are
reviewing our position following today's events."
ÿJennings said "the door is still open to talks with De Beers."
ÿStill, he said, "the heirs' aim is to take a big cheque and go away.
They will get their money quicker from SouthernEra than De Beers,
because De Beers will only pay them the money after there is a certain
amount of [exploration] work done on the property."
ÿToronto accountant Len Lombardi, who owns more than 30,000 SouthernEra shares, rejoiced at the news.
ÿ"I'm happy, I really am," he said. "De Beers is going to be out, and we can market our own diamonds and make more money."
ÿ