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TIME: Almanac 1995
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<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>