Tanzania nationalizes nearly $30M in diamonds

Tanzania’s government on Saturday officially nationalized a $29.5 million diamond consignment seized three years ago in a case highlighting a tug-of-war with economic saboteurs.

The 71,654 carats of diamonds, bound for Belgium, were initially seized at Julius Nyerere International Airport in 2017.

The move comes after a court in the capital Dar es Salaam ordered two former government officials to pay fines or spend three years in jail for causing the government losses, local daily newspaper reported.

Police said the duo confessed their wrongdoing in undervaluing the diamond shipment, and then the state decided to nationalize the diamonds.

The verdict is being called a milestone in the war against corruption and the theft of mineral resources in the East African country.

[COLOR=rgb(184, 49, 47)]Mining accounts for about 4% of Tanzania’s GDP. President John Magufuli has overhauled the mining industry, as the government targets doubling its contribution to the GDP to 10% by 2025.

The government in 2017 passed laws to enable the state to re-negotiate contracts with mining and energy firms.

The impounded diamonds, owned by Williamson Diamonds, were initially documented to be worth some $15 million but a government audit found them to be worth nearly twice that, officials said.

Africa needs 54 such Benevolent dictators

Can we nationalize cocaine if we ship it???

I like what Magufuli did with the gold thieves. Though they should nationalise their mines just like the arabs nationalised their oil.

Quote:
Magufuli focused his ire on one particular company, Acacia Gold, which he accused of dodging tax and exporting more gold than they declared.

“They are stealing from us,” the president said, before hitting the company with a $190-billion bill for unpaid taxes and penalties.

Two years on, this increasingly bitter dispute — which included the arrest of several Acacia executives — has finally been resolved. On Sunday, Canadian-based Barrick Gold, Acacia’s parent company, announced an agreement with the Tanzanian government that will allow them to restart production. Barrick has agreed to pay a $300-million fine, as well as hand the government a 16% stake in each of its three Tanzanian mines and 50% of any royalties.

Now that is a President, hapa. Ke tuko na caretakers tu.