Sun, Nov 24, 2002 - Page 11 News List

De Beers' new outlet has a shaky start

DIAMOND JEWELRY A joint venture with LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton called De Beers LV is bringing the mining firm closer to the public

NY TIMES NEWS SERVICE , LONDON

De Beers is turning for the first time in its 110-year history to selling the finished product, diamond jewelry, to the public.

PHOTO: NY TIMES

More than 110 years after it mined its first rough diamonds, De Beers, the dominant force in the world diamond trade, is turning its hand for the first time to selling the finished product, diamond jewelry, to the public.

But De Beers' US$400 million foray into retailing, a joint venture with the luxury goods maker LVMH Moet Hennessy Louis Vuitton called De Beers LV, is getting off to an awkward start.

Alain Lorenzo, the chief executive of De Beers LV, said Wednesday that the opening of the flagship store on Old Bond Street, just down the block from Cartier and Tiffany's in central London, had to be postponed for 10 days.

The problem, embarrassingly enough for the world's rough-diamond giant, is too few diamonds. The store had not yet received enough diamond-studded jewelry items from suppliers to fill its showcases and display window.

Even before that, preparations for the ribbon-cutting were dogged by an advocacy group's protest campaign linking diamond mining to the uprooting of native Bushmen in Botswana, where De Beers has a joint venture with the government to exploit the world's most productive diamond deposits. Anglo American is the biggest shareholder in De Beers.

So audacious have activists from the Survival International group become that they managed to cover a huge billboard showing the model Iman wearing a De Beers diamond with one depicting a woman from the Bushman group.

Mocking De Beers' marketing tag line, "A diamond is forever," the replacement poster read, "The Bushmen aren't forever."

For all that, the company will still hold an opening party for the store on Thursday evening, with fashion models and celebrities like Sophie Dahl expected to attend. A spokeswoman for De Beers LV, Joan Parker, said that one guest at the party will be Shirley Bassey, who sang the title song for the 1971 James Bond movie Diamonds Are Forever.

Iman, who has become the face of De Beers' move into retailing, will not be there, Parker said, but her absence will be "for family reasons" and not because of any break with the company over the Bushman issue, as one newspaper here reported, Parker said.

The issue has become so fraught that De Beers this week threatened Survival International with a lawsuit for continuing to insist publicly that evictions of Bushmen were linked to diamond-mining, a connection denied by the Botswana government, by European legislators, by other British and Botswanan advocacy groups, by De Beers and by De Beers LV, the retail joint venture.

"No way does diamond-mining require the removal of people," said Andrew Bone, a spokesman for De Beers, which has prospected for diamonds in the Central Kalahari Game Reserve, the vast desert at the center of the controversy, and which still holds licenses to explore there.

Land issues

Stephen Corry, the director of Survival, is unpersuaded. "I can give De Beers this diamantine guarantee," he said. "The campaign will not end until the Bushman's land has been returned to them, for without it they are doomed."

A messy argument about treatment of indigenous people is probably the last thing De Beers needed, with the global diamond business facing a global economic slowdown and only just emerging from another controversy, over so-called conflict diamonds -- rough stones mined in war-torn regions and sold illicitly to finance rebellions and civil wars.

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