Sierra Leone said on Saturday it had discovered a diamond worth
$6.2 million, declaring it one of the most precious finds of the past
decade.
The stone, dug up last week in the eastern district of Kono, was
measured at 153 carats, making it significantly bigger than the largest
find of 2013, a 125-carat diamond unearthed in the same area, the
state-run National Minerals Agency said.
"This 153.44-carat diamond is one of the finest diamonds to be found
in Sierra Leone in the last 10 years," the agency said in a statement.
It was graded as D+ on the D-to-Z diamond color scale, meaning that
it has almost no yellow tint caused by nitrogen impurities, and the
agency said it "could only be matched or surpassed by fancy diamonds
such as blue or pink in terms of price".
"The diamond is a cleavage in terms of shape and the clarity is of very high quality," the statement added.
"In other words, this is a premium stone as a result of its color
and clarity, and had it been an octahedron-shaped stone, it could have
almost doubled the price of $6 million."
Sierra Leone remains one of the world's poorest countries after a
brutal 11-year civil war which ended in 2002 -- a conflict that left the
world with images of feared rebel leaders armed from the sale of "blood
diamonds" recruiting drugged-up child soldiers and hacking the limbs
off thousands of civilians.
But the country's mineral riches -- which include gold, bauxite,
titanium ore and magnetite iron-ore, as well as diamonds -- have
attracted massive investments.
Small-scale artisanal mining has sustained the country's eastern
region since diamonds were discovered in 1930, and it was here that the
968.9-carat Star of Sierra Leone -- the largest alluvial diamond ever
found -- was mined in 1972.
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