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Ch. 6: Part IV: War Years and After

Ch. 6: Part IV: War Years and After Page of 688 Ch. 6: Part IV: War Years and After Text size:minusplusRestore normal size  Mail page Print this page
THE WAR YEARS AND AFTER
359
encourage or approach them to supply additional gem stones. Once any of the outside producers had done so, they would be most reluctant to revert to their former quota. . . . The only solution to the problem is for the De Beers company to resume mining operations at one of its properties in Kimberley and to select the mine yielding the greatest quantity and value of gem diamonds. That mine is Dutoitspan. It will be necessary to work two shifts per day, on which basis an additional .£4,000,000 of diamonds will be provided per annum, the greater portion of which will consist of gem goods.
Viewed from the angle of the South African producers alone, if the posi­tion is allowed to develop to where there are no stocks, the result would be calamitous for the industry here, which has estabHshed itself as one of national importance. Therefore every possible step must be taken at once to provide additional gem diamonds, and to this end Dutoitspan Mine should be reopened at the earliest.
This was conclusive: the De Beers minutes of 14 September 1943 sum up the subsequent sequence of events:
It was reported that, since the last meeting of the board, the question of the quantity of diamonds available to meet possible demands in view of the increased sales had been discussed, and the opinion had been unanimously expressed that the company should restart working one of its mines. With this end in view, the chairman had written to the Minister of Mines, inform­ing him that the board proposed to reopen Dutoitspan Mine as soon as possible and asking him to support the company's application to the Defence Department to release the Dutoitspan Native compound from occupation by the Cape Corps.
It was further reported that Mr. Dickinson had interviewed the Secretary for Defence in connexion with the relinquishment of Dutoitspan compound by the Defence Department. The Secretary for Defence had willingly agreed to the application and had vacated the compound, transferring the military personnel previously housed therein to Wesselton compound. The military, however, retained the use of the Dutoitspan compound hospital.
In the meantime, all arrangements to restart work at Dutoitspan had been made, and the mine had opened on 1 September 1943.
XIX
By article 39 of the agreement concluded in December 1942 (the dates on which the various parties signed ranged between 15 and 28 December) the life of the Diamond Producers' Association was pro-
Ch. 6: Part IV: War Years and After Page of 688 Ch. 6: Part IV: War Years and After
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