You are cordially invited to join us at Hong Kong In Asia World Expo Fair 2024:
As it does at all three of the major Hong Kong shows, MID House of Diamonds will mount a massive display of merchandise at the In Asia World Expo 2024 featuring a large collection of white and fancy-colored loose diamonds, including blue, pink, green and yellow, in all shapes and sizes from 0.30 carats to plus-10.00 carats.
All eight of the company’s international sales offices will be sending much of their top-quality material to the show, among them a selection of rare GIA certified loose diamonds. Also on exhibition will be a collection of unique, high-end diamond jewelry, including rings, necklaces, bracelets and earrings, featuring white and fancy-colored diamonds.
MID House of Diamond booth will be located at the AsiaWorld Export, Booth 7P14, September 2024. It already is possible to set up an appointment with MID at the show by contacting the company’s Hong Kong office, led by Rafael Kish and Ehud Gavrielov, at tel: +852-2-545-7118 or email: [email protected].
Please call +852-2-545-7118 or send us an email at [email protected] to schedule an appointment or to request a copy of our latest custom design catalog.3in4
MID House of Diamonds will be among the exhibitors at the June 2020 JCK Vegas Show. Come say Hi!
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Home » Diamonds blog » Zimbabwe Aims to Triple Rough Diamond Output in Four Years
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The project is part of an ambitious plan by the country’s Ministry of Mines and Development, the goal of which is to raise output in various sector significantly, putting about $12 billion a year into the national treasury.
Speaking to the media, Mining and Development Minister Winston Chitando said improved production by four companies, among them including the Russian headquartered Alrosa and the Chinese-owned Anjin, would raise diamond output, mostly from the eastern Chiadzwa area.
Anjin is currently in the process of restarting mining at its concession, after it was expelled from Chiadzwa in 2016 out for refusing to merge with at state-owned diamond firm
Alrosa reportedly has plans to begin prospecting and mining diamonds in the area, as has the UK-listed Vast Resources.
A CRUCIAL TEST FOR ZIMBABWE’S NEW GOVERNMENT
The new plan will prove to be an important test for the government of President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who rose to power after a bloodless coup in 2017 when the nonagenarian president, Robert Mugabe, was removed from office and arrested.
At the time, 93-year-old Mugabe was the world’s oldest heads of state and among of Africa’s longest-serving leaders. He died earlier this year.
In 2012, when Zimbabwean rough diamond production reportedly stood at 12 million carats, it was estimated that the Chiadzwa diamond fields in the east of the country comprised about 13 percent of global rough diamond supply. The aggregate worth of its deposit was estimated to be between $60 billion and $70 billion.
An aerial photograph of Zimbabwe’s diamond-rich Chiadzwa area.
President Emmerson Mnangagwa, who rose to power after a bloodless coup in 2017, is trying to create conditions that will revive the Zimbabwean diamond mining sector.
Chiadzwa is home to Zimbabwe’s controversial Marange diamond fields, which experienced a mining rush that started in September 2006, leading to water, sanitation and housing crisis.
The government then took over. In an operation called “No Return,” armed soldiers were deployed to forcibly removed villagers and artisanal miners from the area. Some local villagers were used for forced labor.
A DIAMOND PRODUCER WITH UNPROVEN POTENTIAL
Zimbabwe has yet to really prove itself as a major diamond resource. When the alluvial deposits in the east of the country were first discovered, pundits predicted that the country would soon develop into one of the world’s leading producers of rough diamonds, with the potential of injecting up to $2 billion annually into Zimbabwe’s ailing economy
But the Mugabe government’s corruption and hastiness in handing out concessions to underqualified, underfinanced and sometimes unscrupulous interests hamstrung the developing center.
In 2014, Zimbabwe received only $396 million in revenue from diamond mining, down from $456 million in 2013. Rough diamond output had plummeted to about 4.7 million carats, and over a two-year period production was down by 57.4 percent. It fell to 3.3 million carats in 2015 and to 2 million carats in 2016.
The country’s then Mines and Mining Development Minister, Walter Chidhakwa, later admitting that a decision to expel private mining companies from Chiadzwa area had backfired. Legal action taken by certain of them prevented the government from executing its plan to control the area through a single state-owned venture, and 5,000 miners were left unemployed.