GABORONE, Botswana (AP) – In a village outside Botswana ‘s capital, Keorapetse Koko sat on an aging couch in her sparsely furnished home, stunned that a career – and an entire nation’s economy – built on diamonds had fallen so far, so fast.
This African nation built its development on diamonds. Now it’s crashing down
GABORONE, Botswana (AP) – In a village outside Botswana ‘s capital, Keorapetse Koko sat on an aging couch in her sparsely furnished home, stunned that a career – and an entire nation’s economy – built on diamonds had fallen so far, so fast.
For 17 years, she had earned a living cutting and polishing the gems that helped transform Botswana from one of the world’s poorest nations into one of Africa’s success stories. Diamonds were discovered in 1967, a year after independence, an abrupt change of fortune for the landlocked country.
Botswana became the world’s top diamond producer by value, and second-largest by volume after Russia. Diamonds are woven into the national identity, with local Olympic champion runner Letsile Tebogo heading a De Beers campaign celebrating how the industry funds schools and stadiums.
The stones that Koko and thousands of others dug and polished over the decades have funded Botswana’s health, education, infrastructure and more. The country risked the “resource curse” of building its economy on a single natural asset – and unlike many African nations, it was a success.

















































