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Namibia: Diamonds worth $2.6m stolen

Sep 08 2010 20:32

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Okahandja - Diamonds worth $2.6m have been stolen from the safe of a Namibian polishing company partly owned by diamond giant De Beers, an official said on Wednesday.

Polished and unpolished diamonds were stolen from a safe at NamGem, a subsidiary of the Namdeb diamond company, a joint venture of the Namibian government and De Beers, said NamGem chairperson Kennedy Hamutenya.

Hamutenya, who is also Namibia's diamond commissioner, said the theft appeared to be an inside job.

"Nobody broke into the safe where the diamonds were stored and it is assumed it might have been an inside job," he told AFP.

The theft occurred at NamGem's offices in Okahandja, some 70km north of the capital, Windhoek.

Diamond exports are still rebounding from the global economic crisis last year, which slashed Namdeb's revenue by 40%.

Namdeb now says diamond production more than doubled in the first six months of 2010 compared to the same period in 2009.

 
 
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General purpose financial reports are designed to show the value of a reporting entity The Conceptual Framework for Financial Reporting (2010), paragraph OB7 states: ‘General purpose financial reports are not designed to show the value of a reporting entity.’ A reporting entity´s value can be one o... Read their blog...

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