幾內亞

BEHIND THE WRANGLE FOR GUINEA'S MINERALS

Reclining in his ministerial penthouse above Conakry, Guinea's ramshackle capital, Mahmoud Thiam exudes satisfaction.

In the 18 months since the west African nation's military-backed government invited the former UBS banker to return home and become mining minister, Mr Thiam has been at the centre of a scramble for Guinea's mineral riches.

“Nothing that we have done is reversible,” says Mr Thiam, on whose watch Brazilian and Israeli investors and a Hong Kong fund have outflanked big western miners including Rio Tinto.

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