Lawyers for Adamus Resources Limited and business executive Angela List have accused sections of the media of misrepresenting allegations linked to a mining-related correspondence from Mali.
In a statement issued on 25 May 2026, the company’s legal representatives said recent newspaper reports had wrongly associated Adamus Resources and Ms List with alleged regulatory breaches that they say concern another company, MIKO-SA.
According to the lawyers, the correspondence in question was issued by Mali’s Ministry of Mines and referred specifically to MIKO-SA, not Adamus Resources Limited.
They argued that some media organisations created a misleading impression by describing MIKO-SA as a “sister company” of Adamus Resources, which they say encouraged readers to connect Adamus and Ms List to allegations in which they were not named.
The lawyers said corporate affiliation alone did not justify linking separate entities to the same allegations, stressing that companies within wider business networks may operate independently and under different regulatory obligations.
The statement also questioned what it described as the coordinated publication of similar stories across several newspapers, alleging that the reports were intended to damage the reputation of the company and its leadership.
Adamus Resources further expressed concern that the issue had received significant attention in Ghanaian media despite originating from correspondence reportedly issued in Mali.
The company has called on media houses to stop publishing reports linking it and Ms List to the allegations and said it reserved the right to pursue legal action against individuals or organisations it believes have spread false information.
The case has renewed debate over media accuracy and the reporting of allegations involving multinational corporate entities, particularly where affiliated companies are involved.
Source: www.kumasimail.com































































