With Global Help, Diamond Industry Can Foster Development, Botswana Tells UN
New York, Sep 25 2006 7:00PM
The diamond industry, long associated with conflict in Africa, can be a force for positive change through international
cooperation, the Foreign Minister of Botswana told the United Nations General Assembly today.
“We continue to prudently manage the revenue from the sale of diamonds and to effectively use such revenue to educate
our people, provide potable water, health care and build a network of infrastructure such as roads, telephones and rural
electricity,” Lieutenant General Mompati S. Merafhe told the Assembly’s annual debate today. “This is the good that
diamonds have and continue to do.
Botswana participates in the Kimberly Process Certification Scheme, which aims to ensure the integrity of the legitimate
diamond trade, he said, calling the mechanism “one of the best examples of global cooperation.”
The Scheme is “the embodiment of global consensus, unrelenting political will and determination of members to do the
right thing underpinned by strong support and resolutions of the Security Council,” he continued. “This is important
because about 10 million people globally are either directly or indirectly supported by the diamond industry.
He said 65 per cent of the world’s diamonds are sourced from African countries. “Diamonds have and continue to do good
in Botswana. The diamond industry in Botswana has been at the cutting edge of human development and transforming lives
for the better, in all fields of human endeavour.”
Ends