By Marc Frank, Reuters, August 21, 2012
Entrance of Pedro Sotto Alba nickel processing plant in Moa, Holguin province, Cuba. A Cuban court has convicted a dozen people of corruption, including high-ranking government officials, an executive at a state-run nickel company and workers from a project operating under a Cuban-Canadian joint venture. |
HAVANA - Three former vice ministers in Cuba's Basic
Industry Ministry and nine nickel industry executives have been sentenced to
long prison terms for corruption, Cuban state media said on Tuesday.
The officials and a former head of negotiations for Cubaniquel, the
state-run nickel company, received sentences ranging from six to 12 years for
"crimes associated with corruption during the negotiation, contracting and
execution of the expansion of the Pedro Soto Alba (nickel) plant," in
eastern Cuba, according to the Communist Party newspaper Granma.
The plant, the largest of three nickel processing plants in Holguin
province, is a joint venture between the government and Canadian mining company
Sherritt International Corp.
There was no mention of Sherritt in the report and company officials
were not immediately available for comment.
Cubaniquel and Sherritt also are partners in a Canadian refinery in
Fort Saskatchewan, Alberta, where output from the Pedro Soto Alba plant is
shipped for processing, then marketed by another joint venture between them.
The nickel plant in Cuba underwent a major expansion during the last
decade to boost output from 32,000 tonnes per year to an expected 38,000 tonnes
in 2012.
The case is one of a number of high level corruption probes, covering
just about every sector of the Cuban economy, undertaken by President Raul
Castro since he took over for his ailing brother Fidel in 2008.
Several foreign companies doing business in Cuba have been shut down
and their top executives detained or jailed in the campaign against corruption,
which is so extensive on the island that Castro has termed it a threat to the
socialist system.
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The Cuban nickel industry has been the subject of a number of
investigations over the last few years as output declined.
Two years ago police dragged several officials involved in the scandal
away in handcuffs from their offices in Havana, causing consternation among
employees.
Soon afterwards, police began arresting nickel executives in Moa,
Holguin, heart of the nickel industry.
The three vice ministers included Alfredo Rafael Zayas Lopez, who
served in that capacity from 2004 to 2007, Ricardo Gonzalez Sanchez (2001-2004)
and Antonio Orizon de Los Reyes Bermudez (1980-1999). Respectively, they
received sentences of 12 years, 10 years and eight years.
The Cubaniquel executive, Cristobal Saavedra Montero, was sentenced to
six years in prison. The eight other executives received sentences of up to
eight years, Granma said.
Cuba is one of the world's largest nickel producers and the Caribbean
island supplies 10 percent of the world's cobalt, according to the Basic
Industry Ministry.
Cuba's National Minerals Resource Center reported that eastern Holguin
province accounted for more than 30 percent of the world's known nickel
reserves, with lesser reserves in other parts of the country.
Nickel is Cuba's leading export product and its third largest hard
currency earner after the export of medical services and tourism. The
government has not reported annual production of unrefined nickel plus cobalt
since output dipped well below 70,000 tonnes in 2010.
Cuba produced 70,100 tonnes in 2009 and 70,400 tonnes in 2008, after
averaging between 74,000 and 75,000 tonnes during much of the decade.
Nickel is essential for producing stainless steel and other
corrosion-resistant alloys. Cobalt is critical in the production of super
alloys used for such products as aircraft engines.
Cuban nickel is considered to be Class II, with an average 90 percent
nickel content.
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