Small-scale miner finds biggest tanzanite gems in history, worth $3.3m
A Tanzanian subsistence miner has hit the jackpot
after the government handed him a cheque for 7.74bn Tanzanian shillings
($3.35m) for the two largest tanzanite gemstones ever found.
The two dark violet-blue gemstones, each about the
dimensions of a forearm, were discovered by Saniniu Laizer in one of the
tanzanite mines in the north of the country which are surrounded by a wall to
control cross-border smuggling of the gemstones.
“There will be a big party tomorrow,” the
small-scale miner from Simanjiro district in Manyara, told the BBC.
“I want to build a shopping mall and a school. I
want to build this school near my home. There are many poor people around here
who can’t afford to take their children to school.”
The two tanzanite gemstones are the largest ever
found, according to the mines ministry .
“I am not
educated but I like things run in a professional way. So I would like my
children to run the business professionally.”
The first gemstone weighed 9.27kg, while the second
weighed 5.103kg, a mines ministry spokesperson said.
Tanzanite is a gemstone found only in a small
northern region of the east African nation.
“Today’s
event ... is to recognise the two largest tanzanite gemstones in history since
the beginning of mining activities in Mirerani,” Simon Msanjila, mines ministry
permanent secretary, said at a ceremony in Simanjiro district in Tanzania’s
northern Manyara region.
Laizer was pictured on Tanzanian television being
presented with a large cheque after the Bank of Tanzania bought the gemstones.
President John Magufuli phoned to congratulate Laizer live on television.
“This is a confirmation that Tanzania is rich,”
Magufuli told minerals minister Doto Biteko.
Tanzania last year set up trading centres around the
country to allow artisanal miners to sell their gems and gold to the
government. Artisanal miners are not officially employed by any mining
companies and usually mine by hand.
Magufuli inaugurated the wall around tanzanite
mining concessions in northern Tanzania in April 2018, in an attempt to control
illegal mining and trading activities. At the time he said 40% of tanzanite
produced there was being lost.




