Sierra Leone: The diamond that saved a thousand lives
Unearthing one huge diamond in 2017 changed everything for one African village. But the lasting lessons were less clear.
In 2017, five men digging in an open pit found the third largest diamond ever unearthed in west Africa. It was dubbed the Peace Diamond, in memory of the brutal civil war that had ravaged large parts of the region in the 1990s – a war driven in part by factions competing for control of the diamond trade. When the Peace Diamond sold for $6.5 million at auction in New York, the government pledged some of the profits would provide solar power, a clinic, a school and a road connection for the Sierra Leonean village where it was found. Each of the diggers and the pit’s owner also got a small share of the spoils. Nine years on, we return to Sierra Leone to see how much the government kept their promise and to what extent the discovery really did transform the lives for those involved for better, or for worse.
Presenter/producer: Ed Butler
Sound engineer: Neil Churchill
Production co-ordinator: Katie Morrison
Series editor: Penny Murphy
(Photo: The Peace Diamond in the hands of a group from Sierra Leone. Credit: Eduardo Munoz/Reuters)
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- Tue 26 May 2026 01:32GMTBBC World Service
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