home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- <text id=92TT2283>
- <title>
- Oct. 12, 1992: Diamonds Aren't Forever
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1992
- Oct. 12, 1992 Perot:HE'S BACK!
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- SMUGGLING, Page 73
- Diamonds Aren't Forever
- </hdr><body>
- <p>Bootlegged stones from Angola and Russia are cutting out the
- De Beers cartel and threatening to subvert the value of the
- most precious of gems
- </p>
- <p>By SCOTT MACLEOD/LUANDA - With reporting by Barry Hillenbrand/
- London and Ann M. Simmons/Moscow
- </p>
- <p> They are called Garimpeiros, a Portuguese word for a
- prospector or trafficker in illegal treasure. Lured by the
- promise of quick wealth, an estimated 50,000 Angolans, Zairians,
- South Africans, Belgians and even a few Americans have surged
- into Angola's remote Lunda Norte province. From the air, they
- look like a colony of ants tunneling aimlessly into sunbaked
- moonscape. On the ground, the diggers, shirtless, sometimes
- laboring with a pistol in one hand and a shovel in the other,
- are scrambling to get rich.
- </p>
- <p> The primitive mining is illegal and dangerous, but the
- garimpeiros have ample reason to ignore the hazards: rarely in
- history have ordinary people managed to gain access to a place
- where gems are seemingly as plentiful as pebbles on a beach.
- "They scoop out the gravels, put them in a sieve, take them down
- to the river, wash them and then pick out the diamonds,"
- explains Peter Gallegos, an official of the diamond firm De
- Beers. "It is a complete and uncontrolled bonanza."
- </p>
- <p> The diamond rush may be a dream come true for the
- garimpeiros, but it has turned into a nightmare for De Beers.
- The South African group, through its London-based cartel, the
- Central Selling Organization, controls 80% of the world's
- rough-diamond trade. In the past 17 months, largely illicit
- diamonds from Angola and elsewhere have been flooding the
- market, threatening to provoke a price collapse and forcing De
- Beers to spend so far upwards of $200 million to keep the gems
- out of circulation by buying them up.
- </p>
- <p> Worse for De Beers, the glut comes amid growing evidence
- of big-time diamond smuggling out of the former Soviet Union.
- As a result, not since 1982, when speculators dumped their
- diamond stockpiles, has De Beers' legendary grip on the diamond
- market seemed so shaky.
- </p>
- <p> The immediate cause of the problem is beyond De Beers'
- control: political instability in some of the planet's richest
- diamond regions. Although the Angolan drought made
- alluvial-plain diamonds easier to find, Angola's rush was
- triggered mainly by the chaotic aftermath of civil war.
- Thousands of demobilized soldiers with no job prospects began
- scratching around for easy money. Legislation enacted in
- November permitting Angolans to trade in uncut diamonds was
- intended to soak up rough stones that people had il legally
- hoarded down through the years. Instead, because the move made
- it vastly easier to unload illegally dug diamonds, it further
- spurred the stampede to Lunda Norte. Cafunfo, a town of 5,000 on
- the Cuango River, mushroomed to 50,000 people, who live mainly
- in corrugated-iron shacks. "It's like the Wild West," says
- Gallegos, who visited the region recently. "The law of the gun
- prevails."
- </p>
- <p> In the former Soviet Union, fourth in diamond production,
- smuggling is on the rise in part because of the breakdown of law
- and order that accompanied communism's collapse. For years it
- was an open secret that communist Party and KGB officials
- pilfered diamonds from mine operations in Yakutia. Now that the
- old communists have fallen on hard times, millions of dollars'
- worth of their ill-gotten diamonds appear to be making their way
- into Western salesrooms. According to Mikhail Gurtovoi, the head
- of a Russian government anticorruption unit, large batches of
- illegally acquired Russian diamonds are turning up in Belgium.
- </p>
- <p> Can De Beers cope? "As long as you have cartels, there
- will be cheating, whether it is diamonds or oil," says Steve
- Oke, an analyst with the British brokerage house Smith New
- Court. "The question is whether they can contain the cheating."
- Although industry analysts believe De Beers will weather the
- crisis because it has deep pockets and rich affiliates,
- investors are not convinced. When the company abruptly announced
- the likelihood of a 25% dividend cut in August, its stock fell
- nearly 15% and triggered a minicrash on the Johannesburg Stock
- Exchange.
- </p>
- <p> De Beers hopes that the new Angolan government that will
- emerge from last week's elections will see the wisdom of
- stanching the illegal trade. The main cause for concern remains
- Russia, because its huge diamond production coincides with
- deteriorating economic conditions. Russian production in 1991
- was an estimated 13 million carats, compared with Angola's 1.5
- million. "Angola is like a wasp," says Oke, "but Russia is like
- a bear stomping around."
- </p>
- <p> Last month Harry Oppenheimer, 83, whose family built South
- Africa's De Beers and Anglo American mining empire, came out of
- retirement and paid a visit to Moscow -- a sign that De Beers
- is worried and leaving nothing to chance. The company made its
- fortune on the back of the slogan "A diamond is forever." Now
- it must put its money where its mouth is to make good on the
- promise.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
-
-