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Blood Rubies

Blood RubiesThe military dictatorship in Burma is being propped up by a trade in “blood” rubies sourced from the country according to some analysts.

Burmese Rubies are among the most sought after in the world and high end jewelry stores like Asprey, Cartier, Leviev and Harrods are selling the gems in their central London stores, with some items costing as much as £500,000.

Experts Claim
Some experts are claiming that the military junta makes tens of millions of pounds each year from the lucrative trade and America has banned all imports from Burma. However, the gems continue to be sold in Britain despite government claims that it “discourages” trade between the countries.
Recently the British Government’s Foreign Office sources indicated that Gordon Brown was pressing the European Union to introduce tougher sanctions against Burma which would prohibit sales of its gems in Britain.

“A gift of a ruby is meant to symbolize love, but if it comes from Burma the true price is paid in blood and oppression,” said Mark Farmaner, acting director of the Burma Campaign UK pressure group. “Any rubies on sale in the UK will have been purchased at some point from the military and so will be helping to fund that regime.”

Tiffany & Co, an American company with stores in the UK, has refused to stock such gems on ethical grounds since 2003.

Rubies for sale
Last week an undercover reporter from The Sunday Times requested items of jewellery containing Burmese rubies at stores in London.

At the Leviev store in Old Bond Street, she was shown a £500,000 ring boasting a five-carat ruby set in diamonds. “Many collectors want Burmese [rubies],” said the sales assistant. “No one talks about diamonds any more, it’s all Burmese or coloured diamonds.”

Just up the road at Asprey, a company established in 1781, the reporter was shown a one-carat ruby ring costing £10,000.

On sale at the Cartier store in New Bond Street was a 3.18-carat ruby ring valued at £120,000. A sales assistant later e-mailed details of a 10.04-carat stone costing £1.2m.

“This is currently the largest example of a fine Burmese ruby that we could show you,” he wrote. “It is currently part of a major exhibition in the Far East. However, it may be possible to view in the UK in the not-too-distant future.”

At Harrods Diamonds, a franchise based in the Knightsbridge department store, rubies from Burma were described as “the best” — and those which are “pigeon blood” in colour the most prized.

Legal Loophole
Because of a legal loophole, Burmese Rubies are usually cut and polished in other countries such as Thailand, and are therefore not classified as being Burmese by British Customs. Over 90 percent of all rubies now come from Burma.

More than 90% of the world’s rubies come from Burma, but they are often cut and polished in third countries such as Thailand which means they are not classed as being of Burmese origin by customs officials.

As a result of this legal loophole, it is hard to say how many Burmese Rubies actually end up in the UK. Jewelers in Britain procure their stock from international gemstone dealers who usually buy directly from government-run auctions in Rangoon or from trade fairs in third countries.

Gemstones are Burma’s third-biggest export after timber and natural gas and are worth about £145m a year, according to the regime’s own figures.

Brian Leber, an American jeweller who campaigns against the trade in Burmese gems, stated, “The military regime is receiving a great deal of benefit from the sale of rubies because not only do they control the licensing of all mining operations, but they also have a majority share in every mine in the country and run the auctions.”

A spokesman for Asprey said: “We have known the majority of our suppliers for many years. To the very best of our knowledge, these suppliers are not involved in funding conflict and the stones have been manufactured in compliance with internationally recognized ‘best practice’ principles.”
A spokesman for Harrods said products were “sourced by reputable companies adhering to internationally recognized legal and ethical guidelines”.

“The stones are purchased and finished by the jewellery brands themselves before being offered for sale.”

He added: “There would never be any intentional effort by our sales people to disguise the source of the stones . . . Harrods feels that it is up to the individual to make his or her own buying decisions based on their own philosophy and beliefs.”

Cartier denied buying gems directly from Burma: “If we have any Burmese rubies in our pieces then they are vintage.” Leviev declined to comment.

Burmese Rubies seem to be the next blood stone.

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