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Revealed: Myanmar’s US$31 billion jade mining industry and its 'ties to country's elite'

Report by Global Witness investigates murky and lucrative trade of gems

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Industry insider says almost all jade mining companies had a “hidden” Chinese investor, who would provide capital, funding and sometimes the necessary skills. Photo: AP

The highly lucrative industry of jade mining is complicating Myanmar’s democracy process because of a lack of transparency and the involvement of key players closely associated with the former junta government, according to an investigation by an international non-governmental organisation.

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While oil and gas, long thought to be the resource-rich country’s key source of income, raked in US$4.3 billion last year, a report by Global Witness put the revenues brought in by jade mining at US$31 billion during the same period.

The calculation, however, was based on incomplete government data that had glazed over the fact that more than 50 per cent of the jade stones mined in the country were smuggled out, said Michael Davis, a lead researcher of the report and Global Witness’s Asia Director.

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“What we are trying to do with our estimate is to make the point that this is worth tens of billions of dollars a year, far more than oil and gas, it needs to be the focus of the reform efforts,” Davis said.

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