Showing posts with label Sierra Leone mining company. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sierra Leone mining company. Show all posts

Wednesday, 14 May 2025

Sierra Leone’s largest diamond miner shuts down, laying off more than 1,000 workers

Blasting at Koidu diamond mine.

Koidu Limited, Sierra Leone’s largest diamond producer, has halted operations and laid off nearly its entire local workforce of more than 1,000 employees following a protracted dispute over pay and working conditions.

Workers at the mine went on strike in December 2024 but suspended their walkout to allow negotiations. They then walked out again in early March.

The firm, a subsidiary of Octea Limited, was founded by Israeli billionaire Beny Steinmetz’s BSG Resources.

Charles Kainessie, president of the Koidu Limited Workers’ Union, told Reuters that only a small number of workers were still employed at the company’s head office in Freetown.

Sierra Leone’s labour ministry has received copies of summary dismissal letters for more than 1,000 employees, it said in a statement on May 6.

Kainessie told Reuters that workers had only been receiving 30% of the value of their salaries because they were pegged to the US dollar but paid in the local currency, and the company was using an exchange rate from 2016.

He also said workers lacked access to adequate toilet facilities and drinking water.

Koidu Limited declined to comment on the allegations. Its head of corporate affairs, Ibrahim Turay, said he was “restricted from making any comments on the issue for now”.

The shutdown could impact global diamond markets, already facing supply constraints from major producers, including India. Koidu Limited’s exports are around $100 million, according to industry sources.

First Lady
Koidu has accused Sierra Leone’s First Lady, Fatima Bio, who hails from the area where Koidu operates, of fanning the flames of the dispute.

Fatima Bio visited the area after the walkout in March and addressed the workers, criticizing the firm in remarks the company has rejected as false.

Following her visit, she said in a social media post that Koidu had been “unjust to the workers for far too long”.

Gustaf Fredrik Bodin, a Koidu Limited director and its general counsel, responded in a May 6 letter addressed to Fatima Bio accusing her of unlawful interference, incitement, defamation and causing damage to Koidu Limited and Octea Limited.

Neither the First Lady nor her office responded to Reuters‘ requests for comments on Koidu’s accusations and threat of legal action.

The letter, seen by Reuters, said Koidu Limited had suffered financial losses exceeding $16 million from the strike, and that it would need $20 million to restart operations.

It demanded a public retraction from Fatima Bio for her statements and a written commitment that she will make no further threats against the company.

Sierra Leone Information Minister Chernor Bah told Reuters that “everything is being done to resolve the impasse.”

Source: DCLA

Sunday, 22 April 2018

De Beers to Sell Diamonds from Artisanal Miners



De Beers announced plans to work with artisanal miners in Sierra Leone to ensure their diamonds are ethically sourced and sold at a fair price on its auction platform.

The company has partnered with the Diamond Development Initiative (DDI) on the project, known as GemFair, which is set to launch a pre-pilot phase this month. GemFair will provide tracking technology to artisanal and small-scale miners (ASM), aiming to create a secure and transparent route to market for their diamonds, De Beers said in a statement last week.

“The ASM sector represents a critical income source for many poverty-affected communities,” said De Beers CEO Bruce Cleaver. “However, due to parts of the sector being largely informal and unregulated, it lacks access to established international markets and the ability to derive fair value for participants.”

De Beers hopes the new project will help grow acceptance and prospects for artisanal miners, in addition to creating a new supply source for the company, Cleaver added.

Miners who want to participate in the program need to receive certification from the DDI as well as from GemFair. Participants will then be given a diamond “toolkit,” which includes technology enabling them to digitally track all stones throughout the supply chain.

Once the initiative is operational, GemFair will begin buying stones from participating miners, which will then be sold via De Beers’ Auction Sales channel.

De Beers has not set a date for the pilot’s completion, but hopes to make the first purchase later this year.

Source: Diamonds.net

De Beers to Sell Diamonds from Artisanal Miners



De Beers announced plans to work with artisanal miners in Sierra Leone to ensure their diamonds are ethically sourced and sold at a fair price on its auction platform.

The company has partnered with the Diamond Development Initiative (DDI) on the project, known as GemFair, which is set to launch a pre-pilot phase this month. GemFair will provide tracking technology to artisanal and small-scale miners (ASM), aiming to create a secure and transparent route to market for their diamonds, De Beers said in a statement last week.

“The ASM sector represents a critical income source for many poverty-affected communities,” said De Beers CEO Bruce Cleaver. “However, due to parts of the sector being largely informal and unregulated, it lacks access to established international markets and the ability to derive fair value for participants.”

De Beers hopes the new project will help grow acceptance and prospects for artisanal miners, in addition to creating a new supply source for the company, Cleaver added.

Miners who want to participate in the program need to receive certification from the DDI as well as from GemFair. Participants will then be given a diamond “toolkit,” which includes technology enabling them to digitally track all stones throughout the supply chain.

Once the initiative is operational, GemFair will begin buying stones from participating miners, which will then be sold via De Beers’ Auction Sales channel.

De Beers has not set a date for the pilot’s completion, but hopes to make the first purchase later this year.

Source: Diamonds.net

Sunday, 12 November 2017

Another Massive Diamond Recovered

Sierra Leone mining company has recovered a 476 carat rough diamond in the nation’s Kono at Meya.
The 476 Carat stone ranks as the fifth largest rough ever found in Sierra Leone.
Meya holds an exclusive diamond exploration license in the Kono district.
Meya also recovered rough diamonds weighing 27.93 carats and 19.70 carats at the same time.

Read More: DCLA 

Another Massive Diamond Recovered

Sierra Leone mining company has recovered a 476 carat rough diamond in the nation’s Kono at Meya.
The 476 Carat stone ranks as the fifth largest rough ever found in Sierra Leone.
Meya holds an exclusive diamond exploration license in the Kono district.
Meya also recovered rough diamonds weighing 27.93 carats and 19.70 carats at the same time.

Read More: DCLA 

How Efforts to Control the Diamond Trade Are Hurting the Very Communities They Were Supposed to Protect

For more than two decades, global policies aimed at restricting the flow of diamonds from conflict zones most notably through the “blood dia...