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Re: mick post# 181

Friday, 08/21/2009 3:25:02 PM

Friday, August 21, 2009 3:25:02 PM

Post# of 682
Beehive and Babs Gold Mines, Midlands Goldfield

http://www.conquestresources.net/project_details.php?pid=7&s=o

Project Overview
Project Info:
Overview
Details
Geology
Location
Drilling
Historical Work
Maps
Technical Report

The Babs & Beehive Mines are former gold production properties situated respectively about 10km north and 30km northwest of Kwe Kwe. The mines were developed by African Gold PLC of London between 1997 and 1998 at a cost of approximately $4.5 million and operated for nine months before being placed on care and maintenance in early 1999 as a result of falling gold prices and increasing costs in Zimbabwean currency.

The inferred mineral resource for both mines is 360,000 tonnes at a grade of 5.7gm/t gold. A further open pit potential of 400,000 tonnes of low grade mineralisation may be amenable to heap leach gold extraction. The mines are considered to have excellent upside for additional reserves to be delineated following completion of drilling and underground development programmes.

As part of the acquisition Conquest acquired a 300 tonne per day processing plant located at the Beehive mine site which was constructed in 1998.
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Could Zimbabwe show Africa how to find prosperity?
Submitted by cpowell on Thu, 2009-08-20 03:49.
Section: Daily Dispatches

11:46p ET Wednesday, August 19, 2009

Dear Friend of GATA and Gold (and Silver):

The world is full of rich countries insisting on being poor --
the natural resource-endowed countries, especially
the countries endowed with the monetary metals,
gold and silver, countries that, like Mexico, Russia,
and South Africa, allow their national patrimonies to
be priced by the markets in New York and London that
are rigged by the production of infinite U.S. dollars,
the currency of empire.


Another such country is pathetic Zimbabwe,
which is full of mineral wealth and agricultural potential,
wealth and potential squandered for years under the corrupt
and totalitarian regime that inflated the country's currency,
the Zimbabwe dollar into oblivion and then formal abandonment.

International pressure has forced that regime
to start changing, and now the governor of
the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, Gideon Gono, has proposed
the opposite sort of currency management.

In a treatise published this week in the Zimbabwean
government newspaper, the Herald, headquartered in
the capital, Harare, Gono noted his country's mineral
wealth and recommended renewal of the Zimbabwe dollar
on a fully asset-based and convertible basis --
the architecture of the old gold standard.

Gono wrote:

"It is also critical that stakeholders get it clearly
that what this governor is calling for is not a blind
return to the money printing press and then saying to
the market,
'To hell with other currencies, here are new Zimbabwe dollars.'
No, this is not what I am advocating.
Rather, what I am calling for is the guarded reintroduction
of the Zimbabwe dollar where such new currency will be fully
backed by credible, tangible, and locally available assets,
such as gold, diamonds, or platinum, among several other
possibilities.

"The benefits of supporting the new currency
with our own internally produced resources are that:

"-- Such a new currency will have real, tangible worth
as embodied in the real assets backing it.
This gives the new currency the characteristic of general
acceptability as a fluent medium of exchange in goods
and service markets.

"-- Given the country's proven reserves of gold, platinum,
and diamonds, among several other minerals, a fully backed
currency which can freely convert back to the real
underlying assets at the insistence of the currency
holder's wishes will have the desirable characteristic
of being a legitimate store of value.
In other words, the currency will have a stable value
over time, given the direct link to the volume
of tangible assets from the real sector."

Gono's treatise can be found at the Herald's Internet site here:

http://www1.herald.co.zw/inside.aspx?sectid=8882&cat=10

A Johannesburg (South Africa) Times story about Gono's idea
is appended.
The Times story is inclined to ridicule, given Gono's
culpability in the ruin of Zimbabwe.
And yet of course South Africa itself, struggling to
rise above its history of colonial oppression and being
even richer in natural resources, would be a lot richer
still if it adopted an asset-backed currency system.
Together democratic, rich, and self-sufficient
South Africa and Zimbabwe could lead all of Africa
toward prosperity and true independence.


CHRIS POWELL, Secretary/Treasurer
Gold Anti-Trust Action Committee Inc.

* * *

Gono Wants Zim Dollar Back

By Moses Mudzwiti
The Times, Johannesburg
Wednesday, August 19, 2009

http://www.thetimes.co.za/News/Article.aspx?id=1051905

Zimbabweans have laughed off their central bank's proposal to bring back the local dollar as a means of dealing with the problem of "change" during transactions.

Controversial central bank governor Gideon Gono has differed with Finance Minister Tendai Biti, who last month declared he had put a "tombstone on the grave of the Zimbabwe dollar."

Gono wants to revive the dead currency and link it to gold reserves held in the country. He says bringing back the Zimbabwe dollar will make trading easier because people are struggling to find small change. "We anchor our Zim dollar to the gold available. It will not only be the Reserve Bank of Zimbabwe, but all stakeholders," Gono was quoted as saying in state media yesterday.

"We can even print gold coins. The Zim dollar can then gain, as it is anchored on gold. We need to think outside the box."

However, ordinary people and serious businesses brushed aside Gono's suggestions as retrogressive.

"Gono is mad. Can he not see how Zimbabweans have suffered under his experiments?," asked Letwine Domingo, a Harare housewife.

"We don't want the Zimbabwe dollar back. They will just print those worthless papers again," said Chino Nharo, a Harare worker.

The Zimbabwe dollar was the primary driver of record inflation experienced during the meltdown of the economy. Inflation reached a record 230,000,000 percent before the multi-currency system was adopted six months ago.

Industry Minister Welshman Ncube told Business Times this week that the multi-currency regime was up for review at the end of the year.

President Robert Mugabe is keen to see the return of the Zimbabwe dollar.

The unity government has no money, a situation that can only be remedied by increased production.

* * *

Join GATA here:

The Silver Summit 2009
Thursday-Friday, September 24-25, 2009
Davenport Hotel, Spokane, Washington
http://thesilversummit.com

Toronto Resource Investment Conference
Saturday-Sunday, September 26-27, 2009
Intercontinental Hotel, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
http://www.cambridgeconferences.com/ch_tor2009.html

New Orleans Investment Conference
Thursday-Sunday, October 8-11, 2009
Hilton New Orleans Riverside Hotel, New Orleans, Louisiana
http://www.neworleansconference.com/

* * *

Support GATA by purchasing a colorful GATA T-shirt:

http://gata.org/tshirts

* * *

Help keep GATA going

GATA is a civil rights and educational organization based in the United States and tax-exempt under the U.S. Internal Revenue Code. Its e-mail dispatches are free, and you can subscribe at:

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To contribute to GATA, please visit:

http://www.gata.org/node/16
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Ex..Projects in Zimbabwe
Location Last Updated
Beehive and Babs Gold Mines, Midlands Goldfield 24-05-2009
Piper Moss Gold Project, Midlands Goldfield
http://www.conquestresources.net/project_by_area.php?c=Zimbabwe
God Bless