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South Africa's Burgh Picked to Keep Gupta Coal Mines Going

South Africa's Burgh Group Picked to Keep Gupta Coal Mines Going

(Bloomberg) -- South Africa’s Burgh Group Holdings won a temporary contract to keep mines linked to the Gupta family afloat, according to a business-rescue manager for the assets.

Other parties offered financing, but Burgh “came without conditions,” Louis Klopper, a bankruptcy-proceedings manager at Coronado Consulting Group, said Wednesday. Burgh is “an ideal partner” to provide technical expertise and banking facilities, he said, without disclosing financial terms.

Various Gupta businesses are struggling as banks shun them following allegations the family used ties to South Africa’s former President Jacob Zuma to win contracts. Optimum Coal and six other companies were placed in administration in February and were unable to operate because India’s Bank of Baroda, the last lender in South Africa to have open accounts linked to the Guptas, was preparing to leave the country.

Workers at Optimum and Koornfontein mines weren’t been paid on time, the National Union of Mineworkers said last month.

In 2016, Burgh, led by coal entrepreneur Quinton van der Burgh, was involved in an attempt to buy Optimum’s coal-mine export allocation -- a stake in the Richards Bay Coal Terminal -- from the Guptas, but the deal was abandoned last July.

Breaching Code

In November 2016, South Africa’s anti-graft ombudsman published a report saying Zuma may have breached the government’s code of ethics in his relationship with the Gupta family. The former president and the Guptas deny any wrongdoing.

The present agreement with Burgh is for a maximum of 12 months and has no connection to any acquisition, Klopper said by phone. “The sale of these assets to this group is not on the table, it is not in negotiation,” he said.

Glencore Plc is considering a bid for the Optimum mine, two people familiar with the matter said last month. South African miners Exxaro Resources Ltd. and Seriti Resources Holdings Ltd. have also said they would consider buying some of the Gupta coal assets.

Klopper said the bankruptcy managers are obligated to publish a business-rescue plan by April 23.

To contact the reporter on this story: Paul Burkhardt in Johannesburg at pburkhardt@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: James Herron at jherron9@bloomberg.net, Amanda Jordan, Rakteem Katakey

©2018 Bloomberg L.P.