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  • 3
    Dec
    2012
    9:57am, EST

    Gold and diamond rush fuels dreams in South American borderlands

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An aerial view shows an illegal mine in the jungle in southern Venezuela.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An illegal miner or garimpeiro works in a mine close to the Ikabaru river in southern Venezuela.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    Rough diamonds are seen on the desk of a trader in his office in Santa Elena de Uairen in the south of Venezuela.

    In the triangle that connects Venezuela, Brazil and Guyana a huge number of illegal gold and diamond prospectors — garimpeiros — dream of changing their lives overnight by finding a huge bonanza. 

    Writing on Reuters' photographers blog, Jorge Silva describes his journey to document these remote mines: 

    We are just north of the Amazon Basin, riding a boat on the Ikabaru River. The passengers are people who buy gold and diamonds. They stop at each of the illegal mines that appear as craters on the river’s edge. They carry small weighing scales that seem very accurate, magnifying loupes, burners to melt the gold and separate the mercury, and some large spoons to collect it.

    They are also carrying bags full of cash.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An illegal mine is seen in the southern Venezuelan state of Bolivar, near the border with Brazil.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    A man performs maintenance while sitting on the top of an Antonov An-2 aircraft before it departs with supplies to the mines, in the town of Ikabaru in the south of Venezuela.

    The appeal of working in illegal mining is enormous. Four grams of gold equal an average monthly wage in Venezuela. An ounce of the metal goes for over $1,700. The gold fever is understandable if you consider that an ounce used to sell for $250 ten years ago.

    But in these mines, and the towns around them, life is expensive. A bottle of water costs around $12, and a 250-liter tank of gasoline, which would cost just $5 in the rest of the country, here goes for up to $1,200. Venezuela is known for having the cheapest gasoline in the world.

    Masked men stole 70 gold bars from fishing boat in Curacao

    Those who can, work hard. They don’t know if they will be able to carry on. The government is threatening to clamp down on clandestine mining. Thousands of families and whole towns live off this activity, directly or indirectly.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    A garimpeiro digs with a pressure hose in Bolivar.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    Heavily armed guards hold their weapons outside a business licensed to buy rough diamonds and gold in Georgetown, the capital of Guyana.

    In a city nearby, a diamond buyer adjusted the gun on his waist while he greeted a miner who brought some “rocks.” He passionately explained that diamonds are the perfect currency. “You can carry thousands of dollars in the pocket of your pants without setting off any metal detector. There are no borders for them.”

    Back at the mine, Ramón walked exhausted at the end of his workday. His face, ravaged by the sun, was sprinkled with mud. When he smiled, a golden “R” became visible, inlaid in one of his front teeth. Read the full story.

    Jorge Silva / Reuters

    An miner named Ramon flashes a gold letter 'R' on his tooth as he smiles after working in a mine in Bolivar.

    Editor's note: Images taken in November, 2012 and made available to NBC News today.

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    12 comments

    The raping and pillaging of the Earth continues unabated...

    Show more
    Explore related topics: brazil, gold, venezuela, americas, mining, diamonds, guyana, world-news, featured
  • 4
    Apr
    2012
    2:18pm, EDT

    From "blood diamonds" to possible IPO, Sierra Leone diamond mine provides jobs for locals

    Reuters:  While burnt-out houses surrounding the mine in the eastern town of Koidu serve as a reminder of the West African country's 11-year civil war, which claimed some 50,000 lives before it ended in 2002, Koidu's managers see the operation as a success story that augurs a better future for Sierra Leoneans.

    Simon Akam / Reuters

    Heavy equipment is used at the 'No. 1 Pipe' at Koidu Holdings' kimberlite diamond mine in eastern Sierra Leone, March 2, 2012. Sierra Leone's only pit diamond mine has come far from its origins as wartime booty presented to mercenaries by a grateful military junta. Seventeen years and several changes of ownership later, Koidu Holdings is selling gems in outlets such as U.S. jeweller Tiffany & Co. and considering a possible public listing, which could raise hundreds of millions of dollars to fund expansion.

    "First and foremost, it's providing employment opportunities for the people of this chiefdom and beyond and also transferring skills," Paul Ngaba Saquee V, once a truck driving instructor in the United States, told Reuters.

    Not far away from Koidu, meanwhile, a gang of men shovel mud and sift it for diamonds under the merciless sun - the same kind of operation that funded rebels during the civil war. "I have no job, only talent," said 25-year-old Alpha Koroma, who came from Freetown last year. "So I find myself in Kono (the district around Koidu) to find diamonds." Read full story

    Simon Akam / Reuters

    Artisanal diamond miners work at Tumbodu, north of the town of Koidu in eastern Sierra Leone, March 3. Low technology artisanal mining goes on alongside Koidu Holdings' kimberlite operation in Kono District.

    Siimon Akam / Reuters

    Rough diamonds worth around US$10,000 sit on a sheet of doodled paper in the office of a Lebanese gem dealer in the town of Koidu in eastern Sierra Leone, March 2, 2012.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    Comment

    Show more
    Explore related topics: sierra-leone, africa, diamonds, world-news

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