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The Drive to Lift the Artisanal Stigma
The wider diamond world is engaging with the small-scale mining sector and taking steps to encourage better standards.
Jun 12, 2019 5:55 AM
By Avi Krawitz
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RAPAPORT... The community of Fandehun is not used to pomp and ceremony.
The modest village in the heart of Sierra Leone’s Kono District has been
sustained by diamond mining for over 50 years but lacks the basics many take
for granted — notably, safe drinking water. Women, and often children, walk
miles to fetch water from a neighboring village, and they tend to use the same
source for all their needs, be it cooking or bathing.
It was therefore an important step for the townsfolk when
local officials, including government ministers, gathered in early February to
inaugurate a well for the community.
The significance of the event lay not only in providing an
important water source, but also in the fact that it was funded by artisanal
diamond miners who live there, explains Dorothée Gizenga, executive director of
the Diamond Development Initiative (DDI).
In Sierra Leone, DDI is encouraging miners to put aside a
percentage of their profits from diamond sales for community development.
Gizenga hopes Fandehun’s example will motivate other artisanal mining
communities to fall in line with DDI’s programs.
Setting the bar
Community development is one of five focal points DDI has
adopted in its work to bring greater structure to the artisanal mining sector.
The nonprofit also engages with governments to sensitize
their mining policies to the needs of artisanal diggers; works to register
miners and organize them into cooperatives; provides professional training such
as first-aid response and diamond valuation; and seeks ways to raise miners’
incomes by, for example, facilitating having new buyers operate in the country.
DDI took a significant step toward achieving those goals
when it launched the Maendeleo Diamond Standards in April, which it claims
enable ethical diamond production by artisanal and small-scale miners.
As more miners adopt the certification system, Gizenga
expects artisanal communities will increasingly be included in a broader system
of responsible supply chains. Slowly, the wider diamond industry is engaging
more with the artisanal sector, she acknowledges, with De Beers, the
Gemological Institute of America (GIA) and the Rapaport Group among those with
projects in the communities.
Fair value
De Beers launched its GemFair program in Sierra Leone last
April. It was a “big jump for a large-scale miner to work with the artisanal
sector in this way,” notes Feriel Zerouki, De Beers’ vice president of
international relations and ethical initiatives.
Through GemFair, the company acts as an international buyer,
while working with the miners to raise transparency and improve environmental
standards around their operations. That means the miners must adhere to the
Maendeleo system and fulfill additional De Beers standards covering factors
that extend beyond the mine site — such as trading, and meeting the
source-disclosure requirements of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD).
Having set up a local team in Sierra Leone, De Beers has
committed to making an offer on any diamond presented to it, at the same price
it would make to any other of its partners. The miners don’t have to take the
offer, but at least they have an outlet, Zerouki explains.
Where the weakness lies
“Our hope is that GemFair will improve the miners’ overall
ideas, and to do that, we need to bring the community on a journey with us,”
Zerouki stresses. “We work with them to understand the issues, and work to
implement better standards and to empower the miners when it comes to diamond
valuation.”
The miners are keen to learn how to evaluate a diamond so
they have better negotiating power when selling, explains Gizenga. DDI is
working to facilitate training in this area so that each community has an
expert who can serve as a resource for the miners, she adds.
Reaching further
That, at least, is the plan. DDI has a long way to go in all
areas. Of approximately 300,000 diamond miners in Sierra Leone, about 1,000
have been trained in the Maendeleo standards since the pilot program started in
2012. It is also focused on registering more miners, with about one-quarter of
the estimated 800,000 diamond miners in the DRC listed on its systems. Then
there are other countries with sizable artisanal mining communities that still
need to be tackled, such as Guinea and parts of South America.
It’s a mission Gizenga urges the international industry to
embrace further, especially, as Zerouki notes, since there’s still a stigma
about the operating standards in the artisanal sector.
“The artisanal miners are part of your family, they’re a
part of our industry,” Gizenga stresses. “Pull them up and you’ll truly
benefit, not only reputationally, but also in the fight for natural diamonds
versus lab-grown diamonds. We really need to focus on upscaling the artisanal
mining sector, because that’s where the Achilles’ heel is.”
This article was first published in the June 2019 issue of Rapaport Magazine.
Image: Artisanal mining in Sierra Leone.
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Tags:
artisanal, Avi Krawitz, ddi, De Beers, Development Diamonds, diamond development initiative, Dorothée Gizenga, Empower Africa, Ezi Rapaport, Feriel Zerouki, GemFai, Gemological Institute of America, GIA, Maendeleo Diamond Standard, oecd, Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development, Peace Diamond, Rapaport Group, Rapaport News
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