BFF-37 Sierra Leone’s ‘peace diamond’ dividend slow in coming

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Sierra Leone’s ‘peace diamond’ dividend slow in coming

KORYARDU, Sierra Leone, Dec 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – They were promised a “peace
diamond” dividend in the Sierra Leone village of Koryardu after the stone
they handed over for auction fetched $6.5 million (5.7 million euros) a year
ago.

But they are still waiting to see the benefits.

“Absolutely nothing happened,” said Pastor Emmanuel Momoh, who manages the
team of diggers that found the 709-carat diamond in March 2017, in eastern
Kono province.

The idea of handing the diamond over to the government to sell was that it
would generate money to be ploughed back into developing the local community.

But at the village school, Peter Baimoi, who helps teach its about 190
pupils, said there was no sign of the promised government funding.

With no qualified teachers in the village, parents rely on their children
being taught by some of the better-educated local people who can read and
write, like Bamoi who finished high school.

They do it voluntarily, the pastor said.

The government had promised that 15 percent of the total sale price —
nearly one million dollars — would go into a fund for Koryardu to develop
water, electricity, health and education.

A year on, Koryardu still has no electricity and no clinic — and the
nearest state school is in Koidu, about 14 kilometres (nine miles) away.

The hamlet lies 10 kilometres from the main highway — and the road into
the village is still impassable for six months of the year, during the rainy
season.

– ‘Blood’ and ‘peace’ diamonds –

Sierra Leone, like some other African countries, is struggling to overcome
the legacy of so-called “blood diamonds”, sold by warlords to finance
conflicts. The west African country suffered a devastating civil war between
1991 and 2002.

The international community set up the Kimberley certification system in
2003 to eliminate the problem, regulating the sale and export of diamonds.

Experts said Koryardu’s diamond was the largest found in Sierra Leone in
almost half a century.

Momoh entrusted it to the administration of the country’s then president,
Ernest Bai Koroma, who dubbed it the “peace diamond”.

The auction was originally scheduled to be held at the Central Bank in
Freetown, but as the government thought the best offer made there — more
than $7 million — was not high enough, they took the sale abroad.

The subsequent auction in New York netted $6.5 million.

– The legal option –

Under the sale agreement, 60 percent of the proceeds went straight to the
government, out of which the village was to get its share, and 40 percent to
Momoh, he said.

After sharing his proceeds with the five miners who found the stone, the
village chief and the land owner, as well as donating 30 percent to charity
and helping villagers, Momoh had about $1 million net, he added.

Declaring the find to the government was the only legal option. The only
other alternative would have been to sell to smugglers on the black market.

Momoh also wanted the community to benefit from the proceeds.

But there is still no sign of the money promised to the village.

People need to see tangible benefits, said Victor Topoi, a teacher from
Kono province, “not only on paper or in the news, but physically on the
ground”.

– ‘Maintain trust’ –

The Koroma administration did sign a million-dollar contract with a
Chinese company to build a new school and a clinic in the village.

But that deal was frozen when the new president, Julius Maada Bio, took
office in April.

Ibrahim Satti Kamara, spokesman for the National Minerals Agency, said
there had been some design issues that had now been sorted out.

Work on the project should begin before the end of the year, he told AFP.

“The good news is that the money is still available and ready to use for
that project,” he said.

The authorities understand the community’s frustration, he added.

“We expect that by the time we continue with the work, that will change.

“We are aware of the responsibility to maintain that trust, that’s why
we’ve been very careful on how the money is spent on the project,” he added.

In the meantime, the Rapaport Group, the auction house that handled the New
York sale, has stepped in to help, installing 50 solar panels in the village
in November.

It also has plans to bring in water filtration systems.

“We want to make sure that (the villagers) see something tangible as the
government gets its act together,” the group’s owner Martin Rapaport told AFP
during a visit to Koryardu.

But the money from the diamond sale also needs to materialise, said Momoh.
“If the government doesn’t fulfill its promises, I think that it will break
the trust and people will not take their diamonds to the government any
longer,” he said.

“Not only the people in Koryardu, but all over Kono.”

BSS/AFP/RY/1735 hrs