The Zimbabwe Independent

Dodgy gem dealer dribbles Zim govt

- TINASHE MAKICHI

BLACKLISTE­D diamond dealer, Jamal Ahmed reportedly dribbled past authoritie­s by participat­ing in the Minerals and Marketing Corporatio­n of Zimbabwe (MMCZ) diamond auction using a company reportedly fronted by his son.

is was despite his ban from participat­ing in the auction by the government this year following a litany of allegation­s against him.

Ahmed is the diamond dealer infamously known for the Grace Mugabe diamond ring fiasco.

MMCZ auctioned one million carats of diamonds during the last sale which were divided into four parcels of 250 000 carats each.

On sale, 40 companies submitted bids and 15 were shortliste­d but eventually all the four parcels were won by two companies, Diamore DMCC (three parcels) and NRTS Diamonds Limited (one parcel). Each parcel was worth around US$7 million.

Sources say officials at the MMCZ then discovered that Diamore DMCC which had won the three parcels had strong links to the blackliste­d diamond dealer. ere were indication­s that a relative allegedly his son was fronting the company, something which triggered the interventi­on of authoritie­s.

e Independen­t is further informed that the authoritie­s then decided that the two companies should get one parcel each following the exposure of Ahmed links while the remaining two parcels would be re-tendered at the next sale.

ere is, however, another scandal attached to the sale. ere are allegation­s that against the norm, MMCZ allowed the two buyers to pay in three instalment­s for each parcel.

“is is unheard of and the shocking thing is how they valued those diamonds which were paid in instalment­s considerin­g that a parcel will be intact. It is shocking how those valuations were made and it points to a need for an investigat­ion,” a source close to the developmen­ts said.

There are further allegation­s that Diamore DMCC paid for all its diamonds in three instalment­s but NRTS only paid two instalment­s and the third is now subject to contestati­on after the NRTS client refused the third assortment citing quality issues.

That, according to sources, then opened a can of worms with further allegation­s that the client in question might have been Ahmed.

The scandal then reportedly triggered suspicion that NTRS might have selected gems from the parcel and paid for them leaving diamonds of poor quality, which according to sources, sparked a rift between MMCZ and the Zimbabwe Consolidat­ed Diamond Company (ZCDC).

“The last diamond sale has been marred in controvers­y as the blackliste­d diamond dealer participat­ed in the auction despite being barred. He reportedly used a company called Diamore DMCC which was fronted by his son. Right now there are monies still owed to ZCDC after the sale,” another source said.

ZCDC chief executive Mark Mabhudhu referred questions to MMCZ.

“Thank you for your inquiry in respect of the above issues you are raising with ZCDC. Unfortunat­ely ZCDC as a producer does not handle informatio­n related to the customers who buy the product.

“Such informatio­n is competentl­y dealt with by our selling agent who is MMCZ. May I therefore refer you to MMCZ for further responses and guidance in this regard,” Mabhudhu said.

Efforts to get a comment from MMCZ were futile after MMCZ public relations manager Pretty Musonza referred questions to the deputy general manager Masimba Chandaveng­erwa who had not responded by the time of going to print.

Questions sent to Ahmed in writing had not been responded to.

Ahmed was blackliste­d this year from participat­ing in the diamond auction as part of efforts to bust a diamond buying syndicate that had sucked in MMCZ, the state-owned minerals marketer.

Looking at the latest events, there are indication­s that there are officials within MMCZ who still have strong relations with the diamond dealer who was recently threatened with deportatio­n and imprisonme­nt over his diamond dealings.

Sources further noted that there was a possibilit­y of collusion at the diamonds auction which significan­tly enabled one buyer to exploit the market unfairly, resulting in the dealer enjoying untenable monopoly over the country’s diamonds.

Ahmed has over the years been accused of enjoying the assistance of MMCZ top officials to the extent of him buying all of the country’s diamond parcels. Ahmed has always denied the allegation­s citing that he was a clear buyer who just offered competitiv­e bids.

There are allegation­s that ZCDC evaluators and MMCZ marketers have also been part of a syndicate which has been lining up pockets through leaking diamond prices to prospectiv­e buyers, eliminatin­g competitio­n in diamond buying.

An internal investigat­ion was launched at ZCDC last year which resulted in the dismissal of one senior employee (name withheld) on allegation­s related to the leaking of prices to buyers.

The diamond trading industry in Zimbabwe has always been targeted by unscrupulo­us elements with some accused of smuggling the precious mineral through Mozambique.

Three years ago, a Lebanese diamond dealer Hussein Robai was deported from Zimbabwe over allegation­s of illegal diamond dealings working in cahoots with former ZCDC executives.

The deportatio­n of Robai came after there were concerted efforts by officials at Foreign Affairs and ZCDC to protect the Lebanese. He was, however, deported only after the interventi­on of the Central Intelligen­ce Organisati­on (CIO).

The Department of Immigratio­n deported Robai over his illegal diamond dealing conviction­s in India and he also faced allegation­s of diamond smuggling in the country.

 ?? ?? Blackliste­d diamond dealer Jamal Ahmed
Blackliste­d diamond dealer Jamal Ahmed

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