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Botswana president eyes jobs in new ‘marriage’ with De Beers

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JOHANNESBU­RG: Botswana’s president, Mokgweetsi Masisi, wants a new long-term diamond-sales pact with De Beers when the current 10-year deal expires in 2020 and for more gems to be processed locally.

The conclusion of an accord is crucial for both Botswana, which relies on diamonds for almost a fifth of its gross domestic product, and for the Anglo American Plc unit that gets about two-thirds of its gems from the southern African nation. Masisi, who is due to contest elections next year, is pushing for the industry to create more jobs and is “dead determined” that more diamonds be cut and polished in the country.

“We have had a wonderful relationsh­ip with De Beers and we expect that relationsh­ip to be even more cemented,” Masisi said in an interview Monday in his office in Gaborone. “There is a way of actually achieving a winwin for both, and that’s what we desire.”

Botswana is the world’s biggest diamond producer after Russia, and most of its gems are mined by Debswana, a 50-50 joint venture between the government and De Beers.

Anglo American owns 85% of De Beers, with Botswana’s government holding the bal- ance. De Beers sells diamonds at invitation-only sights held 10 times a year at its offices in Botswana. The company sets the prices and its handpicked customers, known as sightholde­rs, are not able to negotiate.

A former schoolteac­her and vice president, Masisi, 56, succeeded Ian Khama as the nation’s leader on April 1.

Masisi spoke in a boardroom on the third floor of the presidency’s unassuming offices in the capital, with his portrait and those of his four predecesso­rs hanging on the wood-paneled wall behind him.

Masisi said preparatio­ns for the talks are at an advanced stage, but declined to give details of the government’s proposals or whether it wanted to raise its stake in De Beers, saying he didn’t want to prejudice the negotiatio­ns. The new deal may differ from the previous one, because the circumstan­ces and operating environmen­t had changed, he said. Botswana wants skilled jobs, Masisi said.

“The whole value propositio­n of beneficiat­ion of diamonds revolves around jobs, the diversific­ation of the economy,” he said.

“Why take them far away? So the very things that cause them to be processed else- where, we want to get to the underlying reasons for that, the attraction­s and bring them to Gaborone.”

Diamonds were discovered in Botswana in 1967, the year after it gained independen­ce from Britain.

Revenue earned from gem sales transforme­d the nation from an undevelope­d farming community into one of the continent’s wealthiest societies, and was used to pave thousands of miles of dirt roads and build schools and clinics in every town.

Last month, Debswana gave notice of plans to deepen its Jwaneng mine to 830 m, a project that will extend the mine’s life by 11 years, to 2035, and allow the extraction of a further 50 million carats. Jwaneng, which started full operations in 1982, produces the most diamonds of any mine by value and is currently 650 m deep.

Such large-scale, capital-intensive projects illustrate­d the need for Botswana and De Beers to have a long-term relationsh­ip, Masisi said. “The returns are only going to be realised in the period of the next deal,” he said.

“This is a marriage we are after.” — Bloomberg

 ??  ?? Masisi: There is a way of actually achieving a win-win for both, and that’s what we desire. — Bloomberg
Masisi: There is a way of actually achieving a win-win for both, and that’s what we desire. — Bloomberg

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