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Calls mount in South Africa for UK to return gem from Queen’s scepter

South Africans are demanding return of Great Star of Africa, which is kept with other jewels in Tower of London

Murat Ozgur Guvendik  | 21.09.2022 - Update : 21.09.2022
Calls mount in South Africa for UK to return gem from Queen’s scepter Source: The Royal Collection Trust

JOHANNESBURG

Calls have grown in South Africa following the death of Britain’s Queen Elizabeth II for the return of a stunning gem “stolen” from the country

South Africans are demanding the return of the Great Star of Africa, which is kept with other jewels in the Tower of London.

They claim that the gem -- the world’s largest cut colorless diamond, which is mounted on a royal scepter that belongs to the Queen -- is a cultural artifact that was seized by British colonial troops at the time and transferred to London.

However, the diamond and its scepter are among the most priceless items in the British Royal Treasury.

With its size and technical precision, the Great Star of Africa, also known as the Cullinan Diamond, is one of the few of its kind.

The pear-shaped gemstone, which weighs about 26.5 grams and has 74 facets and remarkable clarity, is thought to have a market value of at least $400 million.

The diamond was taken from South Africa in 1905 and was “gifted” to King Edward VII by the government of the British Transvaal Colony.

More than 7,000 people have signed a petition for the return of the diamond, according to Change.org.

Many South Africans recently expressed this demand on social media.

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