Deputies supporting the motion argued that Kumtor Operating Company, is badly managed. Stripping it of its license would be a huge blow to Canada-based miner Centerra Gold Inc., which wholly controls KOC, and could further dampen investor confidence in the former Soviet republic.
It wasn’t immediately clear when the deputies would vote on the motion.
Kyrgyzstan, a country of five million people on China’s mountainous western border, has come to prominence in recent years because it hosts a U.S. airbase used to support military operations in nearby Afghanistan.
Criticism of KOC has been led by Sadyr Zhaparov, an opposition deputy who heads a parliamentary committee that has been preparing a report on the company over the last two months.
Mr. Zhaparov said the operating deal with Kumtor, sealed in 2009, is “unfair, goes against Kyrgyzstan’s sovereignty and the interests of society, endangers national security and is causing irreparable environmental damage.”
KOC called the parliamentary report “grossly inaccurate” and said its conclusions are “without factual basis.” It said the Kumtor project has been operating at full capacity without interruption since 1997 and has generated $1.9-billion (U.S.) for Kyrgyzstan, including $620-million in taxes.
Opponents of the current licence want to see greater returns from the mine to the state.
Centerra is 33-per-cent owned by the Kyrgyz state gold company Kyrgyzaltyn. KOC estimates that Kyrgyzaltyn’s stake in Centerra is worth $1-billion.
That arrangement was fashioned during the rule of previous president Kurmanbek Bakiyev, who was ousted in a public uprising in 2010 and whose administration was widely perceived as being riddled with corruption. An earlier deal was reached under Bakiyev’s predecessor, Askar Akayev, who was overthrown in a revolution in 2005.