The company has notified government-run
Under the arbitration process, Manhattan and Centromin will each nominate an arbitrator; they will then select a third member for the panel. Manhattan figures the whole process, which is provided for under the original option agreement, could take up to six months.
“This is not an international arbitration; it’s a contractual arbitration,” says Manhattan Minerals CEO Lawrence Glaser. “The arbitration is done under the auspices of the professional legal society in Peru, not under government auspices.”
The arbitrators have 60 days in which to review all the issues and may extend that period by an additional 60 days if there’s a compelling reason to do so. There is no appeal under the process.
At last count, probable reserves in the oxide portion of the TG-1 deposit at Tambo Grande totalled 8.2 million tonnes grading 3.34 grams gold and 58.7 grams silver per tonne. The sulphide portion contains reserves totalling 57.8 million tonnes grading 1.5% copper and 0.9% zinc, plus 0.5 gram gold and 25 grams silver.
Manhattan Minerals intends, during the arbitration process, to resume drilling on the 32-sq.-km Papayo concessions, to the south, where it is earning a 51% interest from
The Papayo concessions are home to the B-5 prospect, where an initial round of drilling returned 86 metres grading 2.7% copper in hole B5-014 and 52.8 metres of 4.6% copper in hole B5-008. Negotiations with local communities to resume exploration are under way.
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