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Forbes
an hour ago
- Forbes
How Botswana's Sustainable Natural Diamond Story Sparkled At JCK
Diamond exports provide Botswana's economy with strong supplies of foreign exchange and have helped ... More finance industrial development, improvements in Botswana's infrastructure plus nationwide free education. Various jewelry trade fairs run simultaneously during the annual June Las Vegas jewelry week, but the JCK show, presented by RX Global at The Venetian Expo from June 6 to June 9, and its high-end companion fair, Luxury, generated consequential events and design news while marking milestones along the industry's path toward sustainability. More than a global trade show, JCK is also a dynamic seminar site programmed with JCK Talks educational panel discussions and presentations delivered by experts from various jewelry industry realms-- and countries. Bogolo Kenewendo, Botswana's Minister of Minerals and Energy, formed part of the Botswana delegation ... More at JCK 2025. According to RX Global figures, JCK 2025 drew 30,000 industry professionals, including over 17,000 attending buyers, decision-makers, store owners and media reporters. For designers and retailers, some of the most relevant and intriguing exhibitors included the AGTA GemFair, GEMS Pavilion and the Hong Kong Pavilion. JCK's most industrially and globally influential attendees however, included The President of Botswana, His Excellency, Duma Boko, Botswana's Ambassador to the U.S., Mpho Churchill O. Muphoting and Botswana's Minister of Minerals And Energy, Bogolo Kenewendo. President Boko, leader of the Umbrella for Democratic Change (UDC) party, has been in power since November 2024; presidential terms in his country run for five years. A human rights lawyer and graduate of Harvard Law School, President Boko and his administration advocate a human rights-centered approach to governance. Besides being one of the world's most economically and culturally dynamic jewelry trade shows, JCK ... More is also an internationally valued news source via its print JCK Magazine and online version President Boko, Ambassador Muphoting and their delegation came to JCK because "After Russia, Botswana is the world's second most important natural diamond producer,' said Lisa Koenigsberg, Ph.D., President of Initiatives in Art and Culture (IAC). Founded by Dr. Koenigsberg, this New York-based nonprofit organization organizes cross-disciplinary, international conferences regarding diamonds and gold that have included leading figures from Botswana's diamond industry. FEATURED | Frase ByForbes™ Unscramble The Anagram To Reveal The Phrase Pinpoint By Linkedin Guess The Category Queens By Linkedin Crown Each Region Crossclimb By Linkedin Unlock A Trivia Ladder This is an aerial view of Botswana's Jwaneng mine, which is the world's richest diamond mine and the ... More second largest. It is located in south-central Botswana, about 110 miles southwest of the nation's capital, Gaborone. Dr. Koenigsberg continued, 'Data published in the June 2025 Kimberley Process Certification Scheme stated that, in 2024, Botswana produced 28.2 million carats of diamonds, and nearly matched Russia in terms of value by generating $3.308 billion, or 28.8 percent of global output.' In comparison, The Kimberley Process Certification Scheme reported that Russia accounted for 32% of global rough diamond production by volume, which translates to 37.3 million carats. In terms of value,' she added, 'Russia contributed 29% of global output, totaling $3.335 billion.' According to Sarin Bachmann, senior vice-president of the RX Jewelry portfolio. "President Boko and ... More Ambassador Muphoting demonstrated at JCK how Botswana's commitment to sustainable diamond mining and achieving carbon neutrality exemplifies the forward-thinking leadership that our industry needs." As Sarin Bachmann, senior vice-president of the RX jewelry portfolio wrote in an email, 'At JCK, President Boko and Ambassador Muphoting demonstrated that Botswana's commitment to sustainable diamond mining and achieving carbon neutrality exemplifies the forward-thinking leadership that our industry needs.' As leaders of the world's second-most significant diamond producing nation, Bachmann continued, 'Botswanans see JCK as the ideal platform to make a presentation and to engage deeply with the global community of retailers, manufacturers, designers, and media professionals who are in a position to drive change.' In summary, 'President Boko and the Botswanan delegation reaffirmed the global access and influence that JCK encourages and provides. The Botswanans,' Bachmann continued, 'dedicated significant time to connecting with industry professionals and meeting with members of the media in their Botswana House pavilion on the JCK show floor, as well as working with their partners in the Natural Diamonds Council in that organization's members-only Lounge.' Natural diamonds can look and feel manifestly magical: this cathodoluminescence image of a diamond ... More documents how the gemstone emits light when bombarded by an electron beam. Any discussion of Botswana diamonds must note that before diamonds were discovered there by the De Beers Group in 1967, the country's per capita income hovered around US$80 a year. Today, according to the World Bank, Botswana's diamond wealth, robust institutions, wise economic management, and relatively small population of about 2.5 million have made it an upper-middle-income country (UMIC). In 2025 Botswana's purchasing power, as measured by GDP per capita at purchasing power parity (PPP), is estimated to reach around $17,044. (PPP indicates the value of goods and services that can be purchased in Botswana with one unit of a common international currency, adjusted for price differences between countries.) The Natural Diamond Club lounge at JCK 2025 was sponsored by the Natural Diamond Council, which ... More hosted various dynamic community-building events for industry professionals. President Boko and Ambassador Muphoting, described how Botswana is retaining maximum value from each stone by training Botswanans to cut and polish their country's diamonds rather than sending them abroad and losing revenues generated from cutting and polishing. The statesmen also mentioned how climate change-induced problems affecting the country's lands and citizens are driving the nation's energy and environmental policies. Their forward-thinking comments were of great interest to Dr. Koenigsberg, whose organization IAC is staging its 15th annual Gold + Diamond conference in New York this July 14, 15 and 16. 'Some of the conference panels and speakers address similar issues that Messrs. Boko and Mophuting touched on in their JCK talks." For example, she related, 'Among other subjects, this July's Gold + Diamond Conference will discuss how natural diamond producing countries, such as Botswana, can act to retain maximum value from their diamonds and thus enrich citizenry. She added that, 'Global directives compel increased environmental and climate regulation in countries such as Botswana. While greener practices can create both positive and negative impacts, who, and what, will bear the costs?" The Gold + Diamond Conference attendees will examine these questions examination and the formation of effective solutions.' As President Boko's press secretary Emang Mutapati explained to this writer in Botswana House, 'There is no better representative than Botswana's president to bring the country's natural diamond story to this show." In Botswana House, Mutapati explained, the theme and motto of the space was 'Rooted in Organic Luxury'. "This concept of working with nature,' she continued, 'is helping create a strong future for Botswana, its diamond industry, and its people' As President Boko, Ambassador Muphoting and Ms. Mutapati all related, elements of Botswana's short term and long term sustainability strategy involve implementing pre-emptive measures to enhance Botswana's ability to successfully deal with the effects of drought and floods. In addition to expanding weather warning systems and water management projects, distribution of drought-tolerant seeds and drought-tolerant cattle breeds are now in the works. Botswana is also investing in mitigation efforts by phasing out hydrofluorocarbons (HFCs) and promoting various energy efficiency measures. While President Boko and Ambassador Muphoting outlined Botswana's long-term plans for becoming a net-zero, climate-resilient, and prosperous nation by 2050, they also emphasized how the country is working to increase its proportion of renewable energy in its power generating-sources, with a goal of reaching 30% renewables by 2030. Reaching this goal is vitally important, as coal-rich Botswana relies heavily on coal for electricity generation, and coal burning is a key contributor to global warming. The good news is that Botswana is taking steps to develop 1.5 GW of solar power projects by 2030 to help reduce its reliance on coal.


New York Post
an hour ago
- New York Post
Harvard, University of Toronto make contingency plan to allow foreign students to study if barred from US
Harvard University and the University of Toronto have revealed a contingency plan that would allow select international Harvard graduate students to continue their education in Canada if the Trump administration's plan to impose US visa restrictions and prevent them from re-entering the US is upheld by the courts. The US Department of Homeland Security moved last month to terminate Harvard's ability to enroll international students after the university allegedly failed to provide extensive behavioral records of student visa holders the agency had requested, including footage of protest activity involving student visa holders, even if it's not criminal, and the disciplinary records of all student visa holders in the past five years. A federal judge has since blocked the government's effort to end the university's visa program. Because of potential US visa challenges, students at Harvard University's John F. Kennedy School of Government who may be unable to return to the US will be given the option to continue their studies through a visiting student program at the University of Toronto's Munk School of Global Affairs and Public Policy. The program would combine courses taught by Kennedy and Munk faculty members, according to the deans of both institutions. The contingency plans were released to ease student uncertainty, but will only be used if there is enough demand from students unable to enter the US over potential visa or entry restrictions, the deans said in a statement. The Trump administration has moved to cut billions of dollars in federal research funding for Harvard. 'With these contingency plans in place, HKS will be able to continue to provide a world-class public policy education to all of our students, even if they cannot make it to our campus this year,' Harvard Kennedy School Dean Jeremy Weinstein said. The program will be available to international students who have already completed one year at the US campus. The Trump administration has moved to cut billions of dollars in federal research funding for Harvard, in part, over its handling of alleged antisemitism and violence on campus amid anti-Israel protests sparked by the Israel-Hamas war in Gaza. Harvard University and the University of Toronto released contingency plans to ease student uncertainty about potential visa restrictions. AFP via Getty Images Weinstein announced staff layoffs at Kennedy in a recent email to faculty and staff, citing 'unprecedented new headwinds' creating 'significant financial challenges,' including a 'substantial proposed increase in the endowment tax' and 'massive cuts to federal funding of research.' Over the past five years, more than 50% of Kennedy students have come from outside the US, the school's media office said. A total of 739 students from 92 countries in programs aimed at developing leadership in public policy and government are enrolled at the school, according to the Harvard International Office website.


San Francisco Chronicle
2 hours ago
- San Francisco Chronicle
What we know so far about how Trump's deportation effort is unfolding in the Bay Area
As of last month, Carolina's quest for asylum from violence in her Indigenous Guatemalan community seemed to be on track. The mother of two, who speaks only her native K'iche' language, had recently completed a check-in with U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement, and was living with her family in Contra Costa County. Then she received a surprise message on her ICE smartphone app. 'This is your ICE officer,' the June 2 message said, according to Carolina's attorney. 'We want you to come in for an appointment.' Carolina did as she was told, arriving at 630 Sansome St. in San Francisco the next day. It wasn't until after she was arrested that her attorney — who shared her story with the Chronicle and asked that only her first name be used for her protection — would learn the reason for the appointment: Carolina's asylum case had been set aside without a reason given, and an old removal order reinstated. Leaving behind her husband and two young children, Carolina was flown to an ICE detention center in Arizona that same day. Carolina is among dozens of people that local advocates estimate have been arrested in the Bay Area this month in stepped-up operations by federal immigration authorities, as the Trump administration seeks to fulfill a campaign promise by boosting deportation numbers. The effort has been both expansive and disjointed, advocates say, going beyond promises to deport 'the worst of the worst ' while splitting families apart and leaving state officials scrambling for answers. While federal authorities have long had discretionary power to reject asylum applications and other temporary protections that allow people to remain in the U.S., previous administrations have typically used the tactic on a case-by-case basis, said Carolina's attorney, Hayden Rodarte, who focuses on asylum applications for the Lawyers Committee for Civil Rights of the San Francisco Bay Area. 'But this is the first time we're seeing it in this systematic way,' Rodarte said, noting that Carolina has no criminal history and is the main caregiver for her 10-year-old daughter and 5-year-old son. 'This is the new reality now.' ICE officials have declined to release information about key aspects of recent Bay Area immigration operations, including how many people have been arrested, who they are and why certain people have been targeted for removal. ICE has posted videos on social media of arrests throughout Los Angeles at workplaces and elsewhere, and photos of those detained with alleged criminal histories, but immigration attorneys said the arrests in the Bay Area target those who are trying to follow the process and show up to court. 'They should be showing up to their court hearing. It's the right thing to do but it's so scary,' said Roujin Mozaffarimehr, a managing partner at ImmiCore Law, a Silicon Valley firm. 'It's just really nerve-racking.' Inside the information vacuum, local networks of immigration advocates, attorneys and courtroom observers have worked to piece together everything they know about the cases, in hopes of better understanding how ICE operations are unfolding in the Bay Area. Catherine Seitz, the legal director at the Immigration Institute of the Bay Area, said people have been arrested when they show up for a meeting with ICE during their removal proceedings, an often lengthy legal process. Those meetings typically happen once a year; ICE checks that the cases are still pending and people typically return home, Seitz said. In addition, ICE is detaining people, including those seeking asylum, who arrive to immigration courts in San Francisco and Concord for scheduled hearings. In some cases, government attorneys are attempting to remove people who have been here for less than two years by requesting their cases to be dismissed. Immigration officials then detain people and pursue expedited removal proceedings, a measure that is typically used at airports or at the border, Seitz said. 'The confusing part is, under the last administration, (a dismissed case) was a good thing,' Seitz said, adding that people could then move forward with their asylum petitions. Seitz said that by using expedited removals, the government can typically move forward with deporting someone without going before a judge. This was the case for Carolina, who arrived in the U.S. along with one of her children in January 2024, joining her husband and older child. Carolina, who is from an Indigenous rural area of Guatemala, applied for asylum while citing the violence and persecution from the government there. 'What hurts us most is seeing the children suffer through this,' Carolina's sister said in a statement translated from K'iche' and provided by immigration attorneys. 'Our country has so much violence and we fled to this country with the hopes of finding joy here. But now we're seeing things worsen here with family separations.' There is no removal order for Carolina's husband and children, and the rest of the family's asylum cases remain pending before immigration court in Concord, Rodarte said. Because federal agencies have not released information on the arrests, advocates and attorneys have sought to use their networks to keep an unreliable count of the number of people detained. Last weekend, hundreds of demonstrators gathered outside of an ICE facility in San Francisco after immigrants said they had received orders to check in with the federal agency — spurring concerns from advocates that officials were planning to detain people with detention circumstances similar to Carolina's. Though a handful of immigrants showed up Saturday and Sunday, the office remained closed and ICE officials did not detain anyone, later saying that the closure was due to protests. ICE enforcement in the Bay Area has differed from Los Angeles, where the agency has targeted car washes and other workplaces, as well as gathering spots for day laborers such as Home Depot parking lots, to take people into custody — sparking conservative support along with widespread protests and accusations of racial profiling. Trump has waffled on the tactics, at times saying migrant workers are dangerous and take jobs that could go to Americans, and at other times saying they are ' almost impossible to replace.' But with the Department of Homeland Security this week reversing instructions for ICE to pause raids on farms, meat packing plants, restaurants and hotels, advocates for immigrants worry that the more aggressive actions ICE has taken in Los Angeles and parts of the Central Valley could happen in the Bay Area. Jason Houser, a former ICE chief of staff under President Joe Biden, said the Trump administration appears intent on reaching arrest quotas of 3,000 people per day. To achieve those goals, ICE has begun targeting immigrants who have been vetted and given a legal status to stay in the country, versus focusing on only those with criminal histories. There aren't enough people with criminal backgrounds to meet the quotas that the White House has set, Houser said. 'When you set quotas at the White House of arrests,' he said, 'ICE is going to take the easiest path to get their hands on people that they can bring into detention.' Since Trump's second term started, ICE said it has arrested over 236,000 people who were in the country illegally and deported more than 207,000, below the administration's goals but a significant increase from recent years. In his first term, Trump deported 1.5 million people, while Biden had deported 1.1 million people as of February 2024, according to Migration Policy Institute, a Washington, D.C., think tank. The detainment of more people poses other challenges for immigration courts. There are currently roughly 700 federal immigration judges — a decrease after Trump fired judges in California, Louisiana and other states — and a backlog of nearly 3 million pending cases due in part to a spike in people seeking asylum since 2022, according to government data. In many cases, it can take someone going through a removal proceeding nearly 10 years to get ahead of a judge, said Carl Shusterman, a Los Angeles immigration attorney. 'If he's just going to put another million people a year in immigration court,' Shusterman said, 'it'll take 15 to 20 years to get a hearing.'