Sierra Leone rejects $7.8m offer for the 709 carats diamond found by a pastor
The government of Sierra Leone on Thursday
rejected a $7.8 million bid for one of the world's largest uncut
diamonds found by a pastor saying it failed to meet its own valuation.
The 709 carats diamond was discovered by Emmanuel Momoh, a Sierra
Leonean pastor who found it in the Kono district of the country in March
and handed it over to the government to sale. Read here
According to the chief auctioneer and head of the National Minerals
Agency, Sahr Wonday, he said five bids were handed to auctioneers in a
sealed brown envelope, ranging from $2 million to $7.8 million.
He said the top bid was made by a man in a white shirt and light
trousers on behalf of Belgium diamond dealer Ray Diam BVBA but was
actually rejected as it fails to meet the country's valuation.
We've decided not to sell the diamond today because the highest bid
price ... does not match the government reserve price,' He told a packed
room.
Wonday said the government will be going to an international auction in
either Antwerp, Belgium or Tel Aviv in Israel to get substantial offers
for the stone.
Reacting to the diamond auction fails, Pastor Emmanuel said: 'I was
unhappy with the highest bid price," said Momoh. His stone, he said, "is
worth a lot more than $7.8 million."
The diamond is the biggest to be in Sierra Leone since 1970, when the 969-carat Star of Sierra Leone was dug up.
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