Posts Tagged ‘Diamonds’

Centaurus Diamond Technologies, Inc.: How Diamonds Are Made Not Born

SOURCE: Centaurus Diamond Technologies, Inc.

LAS VEGAS, NV–(Marketwire – Jul 10, 2012) – Centaurus Diamond Technologies, Inc. formerly Sweetwater Resources (the “Company” or “Centaurus Diamond Technologies Inc.”, or “Centaurus”) (OTCBB: CTDT) (OTCQB: CTDT)

MAKING A DIAMOND
Diamonds are made of carbon, the purer the carbon the better for the manufacture of cultured product. Natural diamonds are a crystal, which grows deep underground, usually in close proximity to volcanoes. How Diamonds are formed is similar to growing any other crystal, but Diamonds require tremendous temperatures and pressures to grow in Nature. Most Diamonds come up from very deep within the earth, carried by the lava flows from volcanoes.

Diamonds can also be made in factories by squeezing Carbon in massive presses at high temperature and pressure (HPHT). Manufactured Diamonds have great utility in industrial tools and as abrasives.

HIGH PRESSURE HIGH TEMPERATURE AND CVD
There are several ways to make artificial Diamond product. The two main methods are High Pressure and High Temperature (BARS method).

The HPHT method is the one used by almost all synthetic diamond producers today (both for gem use and industrial use). This process artificially recreates how diamonds are created within the body of our planet. A diamond ‘seed’ serves as the growth template, and then a carbon source, with a catalyst, is added to enhance growth.

Once a crystal is established, the original ‘seed’ Diamond is removed, and what remains is an artificial Diamond.

CVD, employs EXREMELY LOW PRESSURE AND HIGH TEMPERATURE (also known as CVD), and is used for coating things with diamond. There remain substantial challenges to realizing commercial growth levels against achieving larger single Diamonds using this method. A diamond seed is again employed. The carbon growth medium is supplied in gaseous molecular form. The carbon floods onto the diamond seed and growth ensues.

Synthetic Diamonds draw impurities from their surroundings, universally and rapaciously . This gives them varying color and attractiveness. To grow pure whites is a daunting task – to be discussed in our associated blog.

About Centaurus Diamond Technologies, Inc.
Centaurus Diamond Technologies Inc. was established to fully commercialize its proprietary, cost-efficient and high-volume diamond production method to provide industrial quality diamonds. The Company’s patented technology enables the production of “cultured” diamonds that are chemically, atomically, and structurally identical to natural diamonds. The gemological Institute of America has tested the Company’s “cultured” diamonds and has confirmed they are diamonds according to their testing protocols.

On behalf of the Board of Directors,
Mr. Alvin Snaper, President

Marketwire – Environment

Donald Ray Bernard: Creating Jobs and Changing the Economic Landscape From Diamonds in the Rough

NAABO.ORG Is Recognizing Donald Ray Bernard for Creating Jobs and Expanding the Landscape for New Opportunities for Potential Workers

GREAT FALLS, MT–(Marketwire – Jun 24, 2012) – In a difficult economic time and an election year, NAABO.ORG is glad to recognize and award an individual such as Donald Ray Bernard who is out creating jobs and opportunities by finding diamonds in the rough from Montana to Texas and all the way down to Latin America.

NAABO.ORG is proud to give Don an award for his excellent and outstanding achievements in helping the economy to prosper and grow.

Recently portrayed in the Donald R. Bernard marketwire.com press release for his excellent entrepreneurship in the Big Sky State creating jobs while lecturing and educating students on multiple facets of law and business, he has now created hundreds of jobs in Latin America.

Donald Ray Bernard has recently been featured in MSNBC, Bloomberg Businessweek, and numerous other publications for his excellent strides in creating new jobs, opportunities, businesses, and more from Montana to Texas all the way down to emerging markets in Latin America, such as Buenos Aires in Argentina.

Recently Donald Ray Bernard has stepped aside from educating the youths at the local Montana State University in fields such as political science and business operations as he works to create a new business around trout. Living in one of the largest trout fishing states in the Continental United States, Don knows the importance of agriculture at sea. In central and South America his latest operation is harvesting large farmland of Rainbow trout with plans to expand largely into the EU as well as North America in the near future to enable Americans to receive the best tasting fish in the world which typically comes from other parts of the Appalachians currently.

While at the same time the great entrepreneur sees the opportunity from trout he also is engaging in other fields of opportunity in Latin America with Golden Stag Safaris down in Argentina via La Pampa via a ranch for big game hunters, something that is largely a favorite for American citizens in both Texas and Montana.

Marketwire – Environment

The Charles Taylor Verdict: A Global Witness briefing on a dictator, blood diamonds and timber, and two countries in recovery

Download this briefing

Read the press release: Justice for Sierra Leone and Charles Taylor found guilty of war crimes and crimes against humanity 

On 26 April, the Special Court for Sierra Leone (SCSL) found former Liberian President and warlord Charles Taylor guilty of 11 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The Court, which sits in The Hague for this case only, found that Taylor played an instrumental role in Sierra Leone’s bloody 11 year civil war. The verdict is an historic one, sending a strong message to those in power bent on terrorising their people that they will be held to account. Taylor’s trial has focused attention on the pivotal role he played in Sierra Leone’s bloody diamond trade and has highlighted how natural resource looting finances armed conflict and human rights abuses internationally.

The Trial and the Verdict

The Special Court for Sierra Leone is a hybrid international-Sierra Leonean tribunal established to bring to justice those holding greatest responsibility for crimes committed during the country’s 1991-2002 civil war. In 2003, The Court’s prosecutor filed an 11 count indictment against Taylor, accusing him of war crimes, crimes against humanity and other serious violations of international humanitarian law, including pillage, murder, rape and the use of child soldiers.[i]

This trial has highlighted the role that natural resources, like Sierra Leone’s diamonds, play in funding conflicts.  In its verdict, the Court found that Charles Taylor had:

  • Received diamonds in exchange for arms and ammunition and was asked to ‘hold’ onto diamonds for RUF leader Foday Sankoh
  • Advised RUF military commander Sam Bockarie on gaining and retaining control over Sierra Leonean diamonds mines
  • Provided practical support to the RUF’s exploitation of the diamonds fields, for example through the provision of mechanical diggers and fuel
  • Facilitated the trade in Sierra Leonean diamonds by organising for them or enabling them to be smuggled through Liberia and on to international traders

On 26 April 2012, the Special Court of Sierra Leone, sitting for this case in The Hague, found Taylor guilty on all 11 charges and criminally responsible for aiding and abetting in crimes, including pillage, murder and rape committed during Sierra Leone’s bloody civil war. The Court will now hold a sentencing hearing to determine the duration of Taylor’s prison term, which he will serve in the UK.

The Sierra Leone Civil War and Charles Taylor

In 1991, the Sierra Leonean rebel group the Revolutionary United Front (RUF) invaded Sierra Leone from Liberia. The RUF, which was armed and supported by Charles Taylor,[ii] had the declared objective of  overthrowing Sierra Leone’s government, which had ruled Sierra Leone since 1968.

The RUF became notorious for its brutal tactics, including widespread sexual violence committed against women and children.[iii] The RUF also used child soldiers, many of whom were forcibly recruited, given drugs and used to commit atrocities.[iv] The RUF’s signature tactic was the amputation of limbs. Peace was eventually declared in January 2002.

According to the UN, Taylor provided the RUF with training, weapons and related material, logistical support, a staging ground for attacks and a safe haven for retreat.[v] Taylor also led rebel forces in – and later became president of – neighbouring Liberia, a country that experienced its own civil war between 1989 and 2003.

The role of diamonds

The Taylor trial highlights the role that natural resources play in funding and fuelling conflicts. Sierra Leone’s diamond fields were a principal military target for the RUF, which employed slave labour to mine diamonds for export.[vi] While in control of the sector, it was estimated that the RUF received annual revenues of between US$ 25 and US$ 125 million from diamond sales, “more than enough to sustain its military activities” according to the UN.[vii]

After diamond sanctions were imposed on Sierra Leone, the gems were smuggled to international markets through neighbouring Liberia where Taylor was president. In 1999 alone, official diamond exports from Liberia amounted to only US$ 900,000, yet official diamond imports into Belgium from Liberia amounted to US$ 270 million.[viii]

According to the UN, those smuggling diamonds were paid by Taylor and those at the highest levels of the Liberian Government were aware of the trade.[ix] Prosecution witnesses testifying at the Special Court gave evidence that Taylor personally received millions of dollars in Sierra Leonean diamonds.[x] In proceedings that were widely reported internationally Carole White – former agent to supermodel Naomi Campbell – testified that Campbell talked to Taylor at a 1997 dinner party in South Africa and that Taylor personally promised the supermodel a gift of diamonds. Campbell herself testified to receiving a few “dirty pebbles” the night after the dinner party, but said she did not know the source of the gift.[xi]

In 2001 in an effort to halt the smuggling, the UN imposed sanctions upon the export of diamonds from Liberia.

The role of timber

To compensate for the loss of diamond revenue caused by international sanctions, Taylor sold Liberia’s forests to logging companies – shifting his sources of financing from blood diamonds to conflict timber. Among those who received logging concessions during this period was international arms dealer Leonid Minin who, at the time of his arrest, was planning a large arms deal for Liberia.[xii] Also holding major concessions was Dutch national Gus Kouwenhoven, who ran the notorious Oriental Timber Corporation, which was involved in importing arms into Liberia and developed infrastructure that was used to transport weapons to Sierra Leone.[xiii]

By 2003, nearly half of all Liberia was allocated as logging concessions and it was reported that the timber industry accounted for over 20 percent of the country’s budget.[xiv] However, Global Witness investigations estimated that, in 2001, Liberia’s logging industry was producing over US$ 100 million in revenues that was not entering the country’s formal budget.[xv]

Charles Taylor must be held to account for his crimes during Liberia’s war

Taylor’s trial before the SCSL relates only to crimes he committed during Sierra Leone’s war. This trial cannot look at or hold him to account for crimes he committed against the people of Liberia.

Unfortunately, no tribunal has been established to hold accountable those who, like Taylor, committed atrocities during Liberia’s civil wars. Liberia’s wars, which lasted from 1989 to 2003, resulted in the deaths of 250,000 people and the displacement of 1.3 million.[xvi] In 2009, Liberia’s Truth and Reconciliation Commission (TRC) issued its final report, recommending that the country establish its own hybrid international-Liberian war crimes court. To date, this recommendation, along with many others set out by the TRC, has not been adopted by the Liberian Government.

While not a substitute for a Liberian war crimes tribunal, it is important to note that two court actions have been brought outside Liberia against individuals who were involved in the country’s conflict. In 2009, a US court sentenced Taylor’s son, Charles ‘Chuckie’ Taylor, Jr to 97 years in prison for committing torture and other atrocities in Liberia between 1999 and 2003.[xvii] Chuckie Taylor headed Liberia’s elite government security force the Anti-Terrorist Unit during his father’s presidency.

In the Netherlands, Gus Kouwenhoven is currently on trial under Dutch law facing charges of war crimes and illegal arms trading relating to his logging and arms transport operations in Liberia.  

Sierra Leone’s natural resource sector today

Sierra Leone is currently at peace, but remains deeply scarred by its civil war. The country’s government is comparatively stable and has made some efforts to reform the country’s natural resource sectors, including the diamond sector. However, despite these efforts, very few of the country’s people have seen any benefit from Sierra Leone’s huge natural resource wealth.  

A lack of transparency has led to the allocation of contracts and concessions to questionable companies, making it unclear whether the country’s natural resource exploitation will really benefit the people. A recent oil find has also led to an influx of large petroleum companies; however there are reports that the oil contracts awarded are highly disadvantageous to the government[xviii] suggesting that once again Sierra Leone’s people may fail to benefit from wealth which is rightfully theirs.

The current situation in Liberia’s natural resource sector

Since the end of its conflict, Liberia has enjoyed several years of stability, and in November 2011, Ellen Johnson Sirleaf was elected for a second term as the country’s president. Under her presidency, Liberia’s management of its natural resources has improved. Of particular note is the Liberian Government’s introduction, in 2009, of a landmark natural resource transparency law, which requires publication of all natural resource contracts and revenues.

However, much more needs to be done if the county’s resources are to become the driving force of economic growth, reconstruction and development that the government hopes for. Like Sierra Leone, Liberia has issued a number of oil concessions, and in February of this year, a commercial oil find was announced. As outlined in the 2011 report Curse or Cure by Global Witness and the Liberian Oil and Gas Initiative, Liberia’s oil sector has been characterised by corruption and mismanagement and in urgent need of reform.[xix] In recent months, the government has given positive signals that it is willing to undertake a reform programme; however it remains to be seen whether this will produce the benefits needed for the Liberian people.   

In the forestry sector, the Liberian Government has rushed to re-start industrial logging operations. In doing so, it has broken its own forestry laws and awarded contracts to companies that do not operate and consistently fail to pay their taxes on time.[xx] Additionally, it has recently come to light that the Government may have quietly allocated upwards of 2 million hectares in ‘Private Use Permits’, which can be used as logging concessions.[xxi] The combination of these opaque permits and Liberia’s formal logging contracts may cover over 3 million hectares; although the country is estimated to have only between 2.4 million and 3.4 million hectares of forest in total.[xxii]

At the same time, the Government has also issued massive plantation concessions without first consulting with or verifying the land ownership status of the tens of thousands of people who live in the concession areas. As this land begins to be cleared for the planting of palm oil trees, people are losing their farms and are beginning to fight back. In September of 2011, people affected by a plantation owned by Malaysian oil palm giant Sime Darby protested the encroaching operations, stating that their land was being taken.[xxiii] However, despite briefly shutting down its operations, Sime Darby has again begun clearing and planting and it remains unclear how the affected people and those living in other new, similarly massive plantations will live in the future.


[i] In full, the counts brought against Charles Taylor were: Acts of terrorism, Murder; Violence to life, in particular murder; Rape; Sexual slavery; Outrages against personal dignity; Violence to life, in particular cruel treatment;  Other inhumane acts; Conscripting child soldiers; Enslavement; and Pillage.

[ii] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts appointed pursuant to Security Council resolution 1306 (2000) paragraph 19, in relation to Sierra Leone,” December 2000, para. 20, 182, 193.

[iii] Physicians for Human Rights, “War-Related Sexual Violence in Sierra Leone: A Population-Based Assessment,” June 2002, p. 2.

[iv] Human Rights Watch, “Sierra Leone: Landmark Convictions for Use of Child Soldiers,” 20 June 2007.

[v] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 20, 182, 193.

[vi] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 67, 69, 88.

[vii] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 1.

[viii] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 123.

[ix] United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 23, 87.

[x] Special Court for Sierra Leone Office of the Prosecutor, “Prosecution Final Trial Brief,” 8 April 2011, para. 21.

[xii] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts pursuant to Security Council resolution 1343 (2001) paragraph 19, concerning Liberia,” October 2001, para. 348.

[xiii] Global Witness, “Taylor-made: The Pivotal Role of Liberia’s Forests and Flag of Convenience in Regional Conflict,” September 2001, p. 8; United Nations Panel of Experts resolution 1306, para. 215. Kouwenhoven is currently on trial in the Netherlands facing charges of war crimes and illegal arms trading.

[xiv] United Nations, “Report of the Panel of Experts pursuant to paragraph 25 of Security Council resolution 1478 (2003) concerning Liberia,” July 2003, para. 32-33.

[xv] Global Witness, 2001, p.15.

[xvi] United Nations Commission on Human Rights, “Report of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights and Follow-Up to the World Conference on Human Rights – Situation of Human Rights and Fundamental Freedoms in Liberia,” E/CN.4/2004/5.

[xxi] Liberian Government Forestry Development Authority, “Report of the Board of Directors on the inquiry regarding the issuance of Private Use Permits,” 2012.

[xxii] Bayol, Nicholas; Chevalier, Jean François, “Current State of the Forest Cover in Liberia: Forest information critical to decision

making,” Forest Resources Management, contracted by the World Bank, July 2004,  p. 24.

Diamonds: A Good Deal for Zimbabwe?

Diamonds: A good deal for Zimbabwe? reveals that several directors of one of the largest mining companies operating in Zimbabwe’s controversial Marange diamond fields are drawn from the Zimbabwean military and police, and highlights the risk that off-budget funding of the security sector could be used to finance violence in any future election.  

The report also reveals that 25% of another diamond firm has been given to a company linked with a man widely reported to be President Mugabe’s former personal pilot, and which has an opaque company structure based in tax havens.

The report recommends that the Zimbabwean Government should:

•    Pass legislation that bans serving members in Zimbabwe’s security sector from exerting any control over mining companies – including being the beneficial owners of subsidiaries of companies operating in the country’s sector.
•    Immediately audit every concession granted so far in Marange and publish details of the beneficial owners of Mbada and Anjin.

Read the press release to accompany the report