Vladimir Pilyushin: The jewelry market is not stand-alone and moves by the same laws as other markets

Vladimir Pilyushin is editor-in-chief of Russian Jeweler, a leading magazine about the jewelry industry in Russia. He told Rough&Polished about his view on the evolution of the jewelry industry in Russia and touched upon some of its problems.

16 september 2024

Sarine’s David Block: Diamond Industry at Standstill Until Chinese Demand Returns

David Block is CEO of Israel’s Sarine Technologies and has served in the position since 2012. In this exclusive interview for Rough and Polished, Block gives his opinion on the leading issues affecting today’s diamond trade.

11 september 2024

Dr M'zée Fula Ngenge: Demand for considerable-sized diamonds stronger than ever

The African Diamond Council (ADC) chairperson Dr M'zée Fula Ngenge told Rough & Polished’s Mathew Nyaungwa in an exclusive interview that although overall global diamond prices have been somewhat soft, the demand for considerable-sized diamonds...

02 september 2024

Amplats sees prospects as a standalone company

Anglo has revealed its plans to demerge Anglo American Platinum (Amplats), which has operations in South Africa and Zimbabwe, to optimise shareholder value. Rough&Polished contacted Amplats to comment on this and other issues but was referred...

19 august 2024

WFDB President Yoram Dvash Remains Confident Despite Global Diamond Challenges

Yoram Dvash is President of the World Federation of Diamond Bourses (WFDB) having been elected in 2020. He found time in his busy schedule to speak to Rough&Polished about the state of the diamond industry around the world and some of the major...

12 august 2024

Mine in Swedish Arctic threatens indigenous Sami people

23 january 2023

ANKARA
(aa.com.tr) - A massive iron mine in the Swedish Arctic threatens the livelihood of indigenous Sami people living in the region, a European news outlet has reported.
Coupled with mass tourism, some 120 Sami reindeer herders in the Gabna Sameby district of northern Sweden are witnessing millennia-old traditions erode as state-owned mining company LKAB continues to expand its operations in the region, according to news website EUobserver on Thursday.
The expansion of the mine will uproot about 6,000 residents of a nearby town, Kiruna, forcing them to move 3 kilometers east (about 1.9 miles).
While both EU and Swedish authorities have praised the mine and its recent discovery of rare earth minerals for its potential in supplying raw materials crucial for environmental technologies, the Sami people are increasingly worried about its devastating effects on local wildlife and herds of reindeer, emphasized the report.
Tomas Kuhmunen, a 36-year-old Sami reindeer herder, told the Brussels-based outlet: "It's everything I am. It's what I've brought into this world, caring for the reindeer, caring for future generations."
The mine and mass tourism pose an existential threat, he said, noting a dramatic shift in the landscape over the decades, a massive loss of biodiversity, and the closing off of paths long-used by the reindeer to reach pastures.
Sami people in Sweden
Sweden ratified the International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination in 1971, but according to a UN statement "it is not putting it sufficiently into practice."
In a 2018 hearing between the UN Racial Discrimination Committee and Sweden, the UN body "specifically targeted the lack of protection by the Swedish government regarding discrimination, Indigenous rights and hate crimes," according to the UN statement.
This was not the first time that "Sweden had been the subject of such criticism," it said.
In 1998, the Swedish government formally apologized to the Sami community but has since taken no actions in a positive direction and failed to fulfill their rights, according to Aslat Holmberg, vice president of the Saami Council, which represents the interests of the Sami people in the four countries where they live.