URI:
       # taz.de -- Sanctions against Russia: Diamonds always get through
       
       > Russian state company Alrosa is the world's biggest diamond producer. The
       > US has placed it under sanctions. But other players like the EU haven't.
       
       BRUXELLES taz | There are strong links between the Russian diamond
       production and the financing of Putin’s war machine, according to a report
       published in April by the Antwerp-based think tank International Peace
       Information Service (IPIS). The first is the proximity between Vladimir
       Putin and Sergej Sergejevitsj Ivanov, the CEO of Russia'se state-owned
       diamond mining company Alrosa which is the largest world producer (45.5
       million carats worth 4.2 billion dollars in 2021, much less than energy
       sales to the EU of about $ 104 billion but much more than vodka sales).
       Alrosa is responsible for 90 percent of Russia’s diamond production. The
       Russian Federation gets a profit of about $1 billion.
       
       Ivanov belongs to Putin’s inner circle and is an oligarch targeted by US
       sanctions. He is also the son of Serge Borisovich Ivanov, Putin’s special
       adviser on environment and transport who sits on the Russian Security
       Council.
       
       Alrosa’s board includes Anton Siluanov, Russia’s Minister of Finance.
       Alrosa’s corporate newsletter reported in 1997 that the company was engaged
       in a sponsorship agreement for the Russian B-871 combat submarine. To
       express its gratitude, the Russian navy awarded the submarine the honorary
       name Alrosa in 2004.
       
       This proximity explains why US President Joe Biden issued an executive
       order on the first day of the Russian invasion of Ukraine, targeting
       Alrosa. Sergey S. Ivanov was put on the list of the Office of Foreign
       Assets Control (OFAC), which means that his assets will be seized and that
       business transactions between US citizens and Ivanov Alrosa are forbidden.
       
       Two weeks later, a second executive order banned the import into the USA of
       Russian rough diamonds and blocked entities owned, directly or indirectly,
       by Alrosa. Besides these official sanctions, the main US retailers, Signet
       Jewelers and Tiffany, communicated in March that they would no longer be
       purchasing diamonds mined in Russia, in order to maintain their reputation
       and avoid being seen as buyers of “blood diamonds“.
       
       The company also been sanctioned by Canada, the United Kingdom, New Zealand
       and the Bahamas. The UK joined on March 24th the US in sanctioning Alrosa.
       Chris Gordon, a British expert of the diamond market and conflict diamonds,
       told TAZ that on 29 April, the UK also raised an import tariff on both
       polished and rough diamonds from Russia and Belarus. UK companies are
       prohibited from doing business with Alrosa.
       
       Antwerp does not ban Russian diamonds 
       
       US sanctions are important since the US accounts for half of the world
       consumption of polished diamonds. But the main hub of the world diamond
       trade, Antwerp in Belgium, where 80 percent of the rough diamonds are
       traded, is not implementing sanctions against Russian diamonds. These
       accounted for 25 percent of its rough diamond imports and were valued $ 1.8
       billion in 2021, the equivalent of 40 percent of Russia’s diamond exports.
       
       The diamond trade has been exempted from EU sanctions, following concerns
       expressed by the Belgian government and a lobbying campaign by the Antwerp
       World Diamond Centre (AWDC). In late March, Ukrainian President Volodymyr
       Zelensky urged Belgium in a video conference to stop diamonds imports from
       Russia. But Belgian Prime Minister Alexander De Croo disagreed and declared
       that if Belgium does not buy Siberian gems, the trade will move from
       Antwerp to Dubai.
       
       In an interview with the Gazet van Antwerpen daily, the AWDC’s spokesman
       Tom Neys said that sanctions could “hurt Russia but there is a chance that
       we do more damage to ourselves“ since “the Russians can easily trade their
       diamonds with non-EU countries.“ According to him, EU sanctions against
       Alrosa could mean a loss of 10.000 jobs in the diamond sector in Belgium,
       as the Dubai Diamond Exchange has said that Russian gems were welcome
       there. Besides, rival diamond hubs like Dubai or Mumbai have less ethical
       standards than Antwerp, argue Belgian diamantaires. Efforts in favour of EU
       sanctions against Russian diamonds from NGOs and from the Belgian Socialist
       Member of the European Parliament, Kathleen Van Brempt, have not been
       successful so far.
       
       According to members of the Kimberley Process Civil Society Coalition,
       Antwerp diamantaires have tight links with the Russian elite. In 2014,
       despite Russia’s invasion and occupation of Crimea, the AWDC signed a new
       supply contract with Alrosa.
       
       Another important hub, Israel, which absorbs 10% of Alrosa’s production, is
       not applying sanctions either. According to the daily Haaretz, Israeli
       diamond dealers were still importing rough diamonds from Alrosa in April,
       but were facing growing obstacles. Banks were reluctant to make payments to
       Russia, since the United States prohibit the use of dollars in transactions
       with Moscow.
       
       Industry sources cited by Haaretz think that even in the case of sanctions
       diamond dealers will find a way to pay in order to keep an access to
       Russian gems. The paper foresees that Israeli sightholders will likely move
       their activity to India where polishing is cheaper. Like the United Arab
       Emirates, India has not taken any sanctions either.
       
       Technically, Russian diamonds are not blood diamonds 
       
       Despite obvious connections between Alrosa and the Russian war machine, it
       is unlikely that the Kimberley Process (KP) – created to curb the traffic
       of blood diamonds, originally to prevent Angolan rebels from profiting from
       the diamond trade – will take up any role in providing coordination on the
       matter of Russian diamonds, say IPIS experts.
       
       The KP’s definition of conflict diamonds only concerns “rough diamonds used
       by the rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict aimed at
       undermining legitimate governments“. In addition, KP decision-making is
       based on consensus. China, the United Arab Emirates which include Dubai,
       India and African producers would probably not support the scrutiny of
       Russian diamonds. The March 2nd UN General Assembly Resolution condemning
       Russia’s aggression against Ukraine was supported by only 33 of the 59 KP’s
       participant states.
       
       On 14 March, the KP Civil Society Coalition urged the KP’s Chair Botswana
       to call a plenary meeting to establish which measures are required to
       secure that diamonds produced in Russia do not contribute to financing the
       war. But the meeting never took place. Botswana said it could not take such
       a decision, which must be proposed by a member country. Furthermore, it
       would be sufficient for one participant to formally oppose a meeting to
       prevent it happening.
       
       The Russians already blocked in September 2021 the renewal of the UN
       Security Council mandate for the UN Panel of Experts on the Central African
       Republic where Lobaye Invest, a company with suspected links to the Wagner
       mercenaries has rights to explore diamonds.
       
       Unintended effects on Angola and India 
       
       A consequence of the lack of consensus on sanctions against Russian
       diamonds is that the effectiveness of US sanctions is only partial. The
       large majority of Russian gems only enter the US market after they are
       polished in India which reclassifies them as Indian products. For industry
       analysts, it remains legal for US companies to import Russian diamonds that
       have been cut or polished elsewhere. In addition, diamonds of various
       origins are often mixed together, which makes it difficult to detect
       Russian gems.
       
       Nevertheless, US restrictions on Alrosa are creating concern worldwide
       across the industry. According to the US business news agency Bloomberg, in
       Manhattan’s diamond district business has stalled over the last months.
       Industry sources stress that the decision by the US and the EU to block
       Russia from SWIFT, the Belgium-based cross-border payment system operator,
       has complicated the task of importers. Transactions are becoming more
       difficult since purchasers of Russian diamonds who used dollars face
       prosecution.
       
       Meanwhile, Antwerp traders also say that business is stalling despite the
       absence of specific EU sanctions against Russian diamonds because of the
       closing of the EU airspace to flights from Russia.
       
       So far, US sanctions have not deterred the Kremlin from its aggression
       against Ukraine but they havie consequences fordiamond producing countries.
       „Bear in mind that in Angola, Alrosa is a major shareholder of the biggest
       mine, Catoca. If one declares sanctions against Alrosa, the joint venture
       which exploits the mine, the Sociedade Mineira de Catoca (SMC) will be
       affected. The Catoca diamonds have lost value because of the situation.
       Buyers are worried about reputation, ethics and that’s not good for SMC.
       The fear is that the public could see a jeweler or a retail seller as
       financing indirectly the horrors of the war we are seeing on TV“, Chris
       Gordon says to TAZ.
       
       Alrosa is the operator of Catoca and the mining equipment is Russian. They
       are currently building a huge mine of very high value, a 400 $/carat mine
       at Luaxe. The problem is project finance, since the money cannot go through
       the SWIFT system. On 9 May, in a brochure distributed at a mining
       conference in Cape Town, the Angolan parastatal company Endiama admitted
       that sanctions could delay the supply of equipment and spare parts to the
       Catoca and Luaxe mines. And Endiama announced that it had revised its
       projection down from 13.8 million carats to 10 million carat in 2022.
       
       Two other African producers could be affected, albeit to a lesser extent.
       One is the Democratic Republic of Congo, where Alrosa sealed a deal in 2021
       with the 80 percent state-owned company MIBA to launch a diamond
       exploration and production program. The other is Zimbabwe, where Alrosa has
       set up a subsidiary to start mining operations after it did preliminary
       geological exploration several years ago.
       
       ## A looming diamond shortfall
       
       On top of the US ban, any stagnation or reduction of the Angolan production
       could lead to a shortage of the supply of rough diamonds worldwide. This
       will eventually result in rising prices of rough diamonds. Indeed, the
       world's second major diamond producer, De Beers – which controls the
       production of Botswana, the second world producer, and South Africa – has
       limited capacity to produce more gems in the short term. Its mines are
       running at full capacity and there is little chance of a production
       increase before 2024, when an expansion at De Beers’ flagship South African
       mine is expected to be completed.
       
       Any rise of rough diamond prices may result in a recession in the diamond
       industry, experts fesar. In India, there is an availability problem and the
       fear of a consumer back-clash. There is also the financial aspect. How does
       one pay for Russian imports? In rubles, in rupees, in euros? There is
       confusion and uncertainty. Some may think of paying in gold or in bitcoin,
       but the amounts required are huge since the Russian production accounts for
       over 36% of the world total, worth about four billion dollars, explains
       Chis Gordon.
       
       The payment crisis has affected the largest world diamond polishing centre
       at Surat in Gujarat state in India, which employs one million people, where
       the bazaar has gone quiet over recent weeks. Disruptions in the diamond
       trade could cost India $2.5 billion during the second quarter of 2022,
       writes The Economist of India. Meanwhile, Alrosa could for some time avoid
       the consequences of the ban – by selling its entire production to the
       Russian state fund Gokhran, according to the Russian Ministry of Finance.
       
       2 Jun 2022
       
       ## AUTOREN
       
   DIR François Misser
       
       ## TAGS
       
   DIR Schwerpunkt Krieg in der Ukraine
   DIR Diamanten
   DIR Russland
   DIR Sanktionen
   DIR Schwerpunkt Krieg in der Ukraine
       
       ## ARTIKEL ZUM THEMA
       
   DIR Sanktionen gegen russische Staatsfirma: Blutdiamanten auf Umwegen
       
       Alrosa ist der größte Diamantenproduzent der Welt. Deshalb haben die USA
       Geschäfte mit dem Konzern verboten. Doch die EU macht nicht mit.