
DIAMOND ACT, 1999
To
provide for the establishment of a board to be known as the Diamond Board
of Namibia; to define the objects and the powers, duties and functions
of the said Board; to provide for the establishment of a fund to be known
as the Diamond Board Fund; to provide for the establishment of a fund
to be known as the Diamond Valuation Fund; to provide for the management
and control of the said Funds; to provide for control measures in respect
of the possession, the purchase and sale, the processing and the import
and export of diamonds; and to provide for matters connected therewith.
(Signed by the President on 30 September 1999)
ARRANGEMENT OF SECTIONS
PART
I
PRELIMINARY
Section
1. Definitions
PART
II
DIAMOND BOARD OF NAMIBIA
2. Establishment
of Diamond Board of Namibia
3. Objects of Board
4. Constitution of Board
5. Persons not qualified to be members of Board
6. Term of office of members of Board and filling of vacancies
7. Meetings and decisions of Board
8. Committees of Board
9. Remuneration of members of Board and committees
10. Powers, duties and functions of Board
11. Establishment of Diamond Board Fund
12. Accounting responsibility, bookkeeping and annual statements, and
unexpended balances
13. Levies payable to Board
PART
III
DIAMOND COMMISSIONER
14. Appointment,
and powers, duties and functions, of Diamond Commissioner
PART
IV
LICENCES
15. Kinds of licences
16. Application for licences
17. Issue of licences
18. Business premises
19. Licensees to display names and other particulars at business premises
20. Period of validity of licences and renewal of licences
21. Transfer of licences
22. Controlling interest in companies and close corporations
23. Conversions of companies and close corporations
24. Preference to be given to Namibian citizens, products and services
25. Suspension and cancellation of licences 26. Return of licences
PART
V
PERMITS
27. Kinds of permits
28. Application for permits
29. Issue of permits
PART
VI
CONTROL MEASURES IN RELATION TO UNPOLISHED DIAMONDS
30. Prohibition relating
to possession of unpolished diamonds
31. Prohibition relating to sale or disposal of unpolished diamonds
32. Prohibition relating to receipt or purchase of unpolished diamonds
33. Dealing in unpolished diamonds restricted to certain persons
34. Illegal acts relating to receipt or purchase of unpolished diamonds
35. Prohibition relating to polishing, crushing or setting of unpolished
diamonds
36. Prohibition relating to export of unpolished diamonds
37. Prohibition relating to import of unpolished diamonds
38. Dealings in unpolished diamonds restricted to approved premises
39. Approval of premises for purposes of dealing in unpolished diamonds
40. Processing of and research and tests in connection with unpolished
diamonds restricted to approved premises
41. Approval of premises for purposes of processing or conducting research
and tests in connection with unpolished diamonds
42. Dealings in unpolished diamonds on behalf of other persons restricted
to authorized representatives
43. Application for registration of authorized representatives
44. Unpolished diamonds sold or disposed of to processors of diamonds
to be valued and sealed before delivery
45. Unpolished diamonds to be valued and sealed before export
46. Registers in respect of unpolished diamonds
47. Notes of receipt or purchase in respect of unpolished diamonds
48. Security check of persons employed or engaged in certain activities
relating to unpolished diamonds
49. Approval of contractors and sub-contractors
50. Approval of security plan
51. Unpolished diamonds found or picked up by chance
52. Restricted areas
53. Possession of diamondiferous concentrate
54. Export of diamondiferous concentrate
55. Removal of sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral from restricted
areas
56. Export of sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral reasonably
believed may contain diamonds
PART
VII
DIAMOND PROSPECTING OR MINING VESSELS
57. Registration
of diamond prospecting or mining vessels
PART
VIII
SPECIAL POWERS OF MINISTER RELATING TO DIAMOND INDUSTRY, INFORMATION AND
ENQUIRIES
58. Securing regular
supply of unpolished diamonds for diamond processing
59. Measuring of international market prices of unpolished diamonds
60. Furnishing Minister with information
61. Enquiries by Minister
PART
IX
FINANCIAL MATTERS
62. Duties payable
on unpolished diamonds
63. Diamond Valuation Fund
PART
X
POLISHED DIAMONDS
64. Export of polished
diamonds
PART
XI
SEARCH, SEIZURE AND ARREST AND OTHER MISCELLANEOUS POWERS
65. Designation of
diamond inspectors
66. Powers and duties of diamond inspectors and police officials
67. Search of persons and things
68. Malicious arrest, seizure and search
PART
XII
MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
69. Regulations
70. Application of Act, and jurisdiction of courts in respect of offences
under this Act
71. General offences and penalties
72. Negligent loss of unpolished diamonds
73. Falsely creating impression that unpolished diamonds naturally occur
in any place
74. Theft of diamonds
75. Attempt, conspiracy, aiding and inducing another person to commit
offence
76. Documentary evidence
77. Forfeiture
78. Jurisdiction of magistrates' courts in respect of punishments
79. Delegation of powers
80. Repeal of laws, and savings
81. Short title and commencement
SCHEDULE
LAWS REPEALED
BE
IT ENACTED by the Parliament of the Republic of Namibia, as follows:-
PART
I
PRELIMINARY
Definitions
1. In this Act, unless the context otherwise
indicates -
"auditor" means an auditor who -
(a) is registered
in terms of the Public Accountants' and Auditors' Act, 1951 (Act No. 51
of 1951);
(b) is a member of
an institution recognized by the Auditor-General, for the purposes of
this Act, as a controlling body for auditors; and
(c) is resident in
Namibia; "authorized representative" means an authorized representative
registered as such in terms of section 43;
"Board"
means the Diamond Board of Namibia established by section 2(1);
"business premises",
in relation to a licensee, means premises of the licensee of which particulars
of the location have been endorsed on his or her licence in terms of section
17(3)(c) or 18(5)(a);
"Commissioner"
means the Diamond Commissioner appointed under section 14(1);
"contractor"
means any person with whom a producer or the holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence has entered into an agreement to win or recover or to prospect
for diamonds on his or her behalf, but does not include an agreement of
employment or an agreement with an individual for the rendering of services
by that individual personally;
"controlling
interest", in relation to -
(a) a company, means
-
(i) direct or indirect beneficial ownership of 50 per
cent or more of the issued share capital of the company by a person, acting
singly or in concert with any other person; or
(ii) direct or indirect control by a person, acting
singly or in concert with any other person, of 50 per cent or more of
the voting power in respect of the issued shares of the company; or
(iii) the direct or indirect power by a person, acting
singly or in concert with any other person, to appoint or remove the majority
of the directors of the company; and
(b) a close corporation,
means -
(i) direct or indirect beneficial ownership of 50 per
cent or more of the interest in the close corporation by a person, acting
singly or in concert with any other person; or
(ii) direct or indirect control by a person, acting
singly or in concert with any other person, of 50 per cent or more of
the voting power in the close corporation;
"Criminal Procedure
Act" means the Criminal Procedure Act, 1977 (Act No. 51 of 1977);
"crushed diamond"
means any diamond deriving from a diamond which has been subjected to
a process of crushing such that it has been rendered into fragments, splinters
or particles, but does not include diamond powder;
"cutter"
means the holder of a diamond cutting licence contemplated in section
15(b);
"dealer"
means the holder of a diamond dealer's licence contemplated in section
15(a);
"diamond inspector"
means a diamond inspector designated under section 65(1) or (2);
"diamond powder"
means any powder deriving from a diamond which has been subjected to a
process of polishing or crushing;
"diamond prospecting
or mining vessel" means any vessel which is used for prospecting
for or mining of diamonds; "diamondiferous concentrate" means
the end product of the treatment process of diamond bearing host rock
or sediment through a heavy mineral concentration system, prior to removal
of the diamonds by X-ray, hand sorting or other means;
"exclusive prospecting
licence" means an exclusive prospecting licence issued under section
70 of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act and specifying that the
holder thereof is entitled to carry on prospecting operations, as defined
in section 1(1) of that Act, in respect of diamonds, and includes the
renewal of any such licence;
"financial institution"
means a banking or like institution authorized or registered in terms
of the applicable laws of Namibia to conduct business as such;
"financial year"
means -
(a) in relation to
the Board, the financial year of the Board referred to in section 12(2);
(b) in relation to
the Diamond Valuation Fund, the financial year of the Diamond Valuation
Fund referred to in section 63(4);
(c) for the purposes
of section 62(8), a financial year as defined in section 1(1) of the State
Finance Act, 1991 (Act No. 31 of 1991);
"Inspector-General"
means the Inspector-General of the Namibian Police Force;
"land"
means land as defined in section 1(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting and
Mining) Act;
"licence"
means a diamond dealer's licence, diamond cutting licence, diamond tool-making
licence or diamond research licence contemplated in section 15, and includes
the renewal of any such licence;
"licensee"
means a dealer, cutter, tool-maker or researcher;
"low-water line"
means the line of lowest astronomical tide;
"mineral"
means any substance, whether in solid, liquid or gaseous form, occurring
naturally in, on or under any land and having been formed by or subjected
to a geological process, but does not include -
(a) water, not being
water taken from land or from the sea for the extraction therefrom of
a mineral or a group of minerals;
(b) petroleum, as
defined in section 1(1) of the Petroleum (Exploration and Production)
Act, 1991 (Act No. 2 of 1991); (c) sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone or
rock; or
(d) any diamond;
"mineral deposit
retention licence" means a mineral deposit retention licence as defined
in section 1(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act;
"Minerals (Prospecting
and Mining) Act" means the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act,
1992 (Act No. 33 of 1992);
"mining"
means mining as defined in the definition of "mine" in section
1(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act;
"Minister"
means the Minister of Mines and Energy; "Ministry" means the
Ministry of Mines and Energy;
"Namibian Police
Force" means the Namibian Police Force established by section 2 of
the Police Act, 1990 (Act No. 19 of 1990);
"Namibian waters"
means the Namibian waters as defined in section 1 of the Sea Fisheries
Act, 1992 (Act No. 29 of 1992);
"non-exclusive
prospecting licence" means a non-exclusive prospecting licence as
defined in section 1(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act;
"offshore"
means seaward from the low-water line or any other base line from which
the territorial sea was measured, whichever of such lines is the most
landward;
"onshore"
means landward from the low-water line or any other base line from which
the territorial sea was measured, whichever of such lines is the most
landward;
"partly processed
diamond" means a diamond which has undergone one or more phases of
the manufacturing processes to render it a polished diamond but which
manufacturing processes have not been completed with the result that the
diamond is not marketable as a polished diamond without undergoing any
further manufacturing process;
"Permanent Secretary"
means the Permanent Secretary: Mines and Energy;
"permit"
means any permit contemplated in section 27;
"person"
includes any company, close corporation or partnership;
"police official"
means a member of the Namibian Police Force;
"polished diamond"
means an unset diamond, including a synthetic diamond, which has undergone
various manufacturing processes resulting in a gemstone which is of acceptable
cut by international standards and is marketable as a polished diamond
without undergoing any further manufacturing process;
"polishing",
in relation to any unpolished or polished diamond, means the sawing, cutting,
cleaving or dividing in any manner, faceting or altering of that diamond,
and "polish" has a corresponding meaning;
"possess"
includes keeping, storing or having in custody or under control or supervision,
and "possession" has a corresponding meaning;
"prescribe"
means prescribe by regulation, and "prescribed" has a corresponding
meaning;
"producer"
means any person who is in terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining)
Act entitled to win or recover diamonds, but does not include the holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence
acting in his or her capacity as such a holder;
"prospecting"
means prospecting as defined in section 1(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting
and Mining) Act, and "prospect" has a corresponding meaning;
"purchase",
in relation to an unpolished diamond, means to purchase the unpolished
diamond, to deal in it or to obtain it by way of barter, pledge or in
any like manner;
"register"
includes a computer print-out as defined in section 1(1) of the Computer
Evidence Act, 1985 (Act No. 32 of 1985); "regulation" means
a regulation made under section 69;
"researcher"
means the holder of a diamond research licence contemplated in section
15(d);
"restricted
area" means a restricted area referred to in section 52(2);
"sell",
in relation to an unpolished diamond, means to sell the unpolished diamond,
to offer or expose it for sale, barter or pledge or for any like purpose
or to dispose of or deliver it for the purpose of trade;
"staff member"
means a staff member as defined in section 1(1) of the Public Service
Act, 1995 (Act No. 13 of 1995);
"State Revenue
Fund" means the State Revenue Fund referred to in Article 125(1)
of the Namibian Constitution;
"sub-contractor"
means -
(a) any person with
whom a contractor has entered into an agreement to win or recover or to
prospect for diamonds on behalf of such contractor, but does not include
an agreement of employment or an agreement with an individual for the
rendering of services by that individual personally;
(b) any person with
whom a sub-contractor, as defined in paragraph (a), has entered into an
agreement to win or recover or to prospect for diamonds on behalf of such
sub-contractor, but does not include an agreement of employment or an
agreement with an individual for the rendering of services by that individual
personally;
"synthetic diamond"
means a man-made diamond which has the same chemical, physical and optical
properties as a natural diamond;
"territorial
sea" means the territorial sea of Namibia referred to in section
2 of the Territorial Sea and Exclusive Economic Zone of Namibia Act, 1990
(Act No. 3 of 1990);
"this Act"
includes the regulations and notices made or issued thereunder;
"tool-maker"
means the holder of a diamond tool-making licence contemplated in section
15(c);
"unpolished
diamond" means a diamond in its natural state or a synthetic diamond
which has after the production thereof not been altered in any manner,
and includes a crushed diamond and a partly processed diamond, but does
not include any unpolished diamond set for industrial purposes in any
tool;
"vessel"
means any ocean- or sea-navigable craft of any description whether self-propelled
or not;
"voting member
of the Board" means a member of the Board who is in terms of section
4(4) entitled to vote at meetings of the Board.
PART
II
DIAMOND BOARD OF NAMIBIA
Establishment
of Diamond Board of Namibia
2.
(1) There is hereby established a board to be known
as the Diamond Board of Namibia. (2) The Board shall for all purposes
be a juristic person.
Objects of Board
3.
The objects of the Board are -
(a) to advise the
Minister on any matter relating to the diamond industry in, and the control
and protection of the diamond resources of, Namibia;
(b) to advise the
Minister on any such matter referred to it by the Minister for investigation
or advice;
(c) to facilitate
by financial or other means the promotion and protection of such diamond
industry and diamond resources;
(d) to perform such
other functions in relation to the control and protection of such diamond
industry and diamond resources as the Minister after consultation with
the Board may prescribe.
Constitution of
Board
4.
(1) The Board shall consist of -
(a) one staff member
of the Ministry, who shall be the chairperson;
(b) one staff member
of the Ministry of Finance, nominated by the Minister of Finance;
(c) one staff member
of the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources, nominated by the Minister
of Fisheries and Marine Resources;
(d) the commanding
officer of that unit of the Namibian Police Force charged with the protection
of diamonds;
(e) three persons
who are nominated by producers, which producers in the opinion of the
Minister are capable of representing the interests of large-scale producers;
(f) one person who
is nominated by a producer, which producer in the opinion of the Minister
is capable of representing the interests of small-scale producers;
(g) one person who
is a member of a recognized trade union which in the opinion of the Minister
represents the interests of employees in the diamond industry and who
is nominated by that trade union;
(h) one person who
is nominated by a cutter, which cutter in the opinion of the Minister
is capable of representing the interests of cutters;
(i) one person who
is nominated by a dealer, which dealer in the opinion of the Minister
is capable of representing the interests of dealers;
(j) one person who
is nominated by a dealer in polished diamonds engaged in the manufacturing
of jewellery, which dealer in the opinion of the Minister is capable of
representing the interests of such dealers; and
(k) so many other
persons, but not more than two, as the Minister may deem necessary and
who in his or her opinion are able to assist the Board in achieving its
objects.
(2) Subject to the
provisions of section 5, the Minister shall appoint the persons referred
to in subsection (1) as members of the Board.
(3) The Minister
may, having regard to the provisions of this section, appoint an alternate
member to every member of the Board, and an alternate member so appointed
shall act as member of the Board only when the member to whom he or she
is alternate is for any reason absent or unable to perform his or her
functions on the Board.
(4) Only members
of the Board referred to in subsection (1)(a), (b), (c), (d), (e) and
(f) or, when acting as contemplated in subsection (3), their respective
alternates shall have the right to vote at meetings of the Board.
(5) The Minister
shall appoint a voting member of the Board as vice-chairperson of the
Board.
(6) The vice-chairperson
shall act as chairperson of the Board whenever the chairperson is for
any reason absent or unable to act as chairperson.
(7) All administrative
work incidental to the performance of the functions of the Board and its
committees shall be performed by staff members of the Ministry designated
for that purpose by the Permanent Secretary.
(8) The Permanent
Secretary may designate a staff member referred to in subsection (7) as
secretary of the Board.
Persons not qualified
to be members of Board
5.
No person shall be appointed as a member or an alternate member of
the Board, if such person -
(a) is not -
- a Namibian citizen;
or
- ordinarily resident
in Namibia;
(b) is an unrehabilitated
insolvent;
(c) is of unsound
mind and has been declared so by a competent court;
(d) has been convicted
of any offence under this Act or the Diamond Industry Protection Proclamation,
1939 (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939);
(e) has, whether
in Namibia or elsewhere, been convicted under any law of -
- any offence involving
fraud or dishonesty; or
- any other offence
which in the opinion of the Minister renders him or her unsuitable for
such appointment;
(f) has elsewhere
than in Namibia been convicted under any law of any offence relating to
the unlawful dealing in or possession of diamonds; or
(g) in the opinion
of the Minister is or has been involved in activities relating to the
unlawful dealing in or possession of diamonds.
Term of office
of members of Board and filling of vacancies
6.
(1) (a) Subject to the provisions
of subsection (2), a member or an alternate member of the Board shall
hold office for a periods of three years and shall, upon the expiry of
his or her term of office but subject to the provisions of paragraph (b)
of this subsection, be eligible for reappointment.
(b) No member of
the Board referred to in section 4(1)(b), (c), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i)
or (j) or, where applicable, his or her alternate shall be eligible for
reappointment unless he or she has been renominated as contemplated in
that section.
(2) A member or an
alternate member of the Board shall cease to hold office -
(a) if such member
or alternate member becomes subject to any disqualification contemplated
in section 5;
(b) if such member
or alternate member by notice in writing addressed and delivered to the
Minister, resigns as a member or an alternate member of the Board;
(c) if such member
or alternate member is removed from office under subsection (3);
(d) if, where applicable,
such member's or alternate member's nomination as a member or an alternate
member of the Board is withdrawn by notice in writing addressed and delivered
to the Minister by the person who has nominated him or her;
(e) in the case of
such member, if he or she is absent from three consecutive meetings of
the Board without leave of the Board or, in the case of such alternate
member, if he or she is so absent during the absence or vacancy in the
office of the member of the Board to whom he or she has been appointed
as alternate member; or
(f) in the case of
a member or, where applicable, an alternate member referred to in section
4(1)(a), (b), (c) or (d), if he or she ceases to hold the qualification
by virtue of which he or she was appointed as a member or an alternate
member of the Board.
(3) The Minister
in consultation with the Board and, where applicable, with the person
who has nominated the member or alternate member of the Board concerned
may at any time, after having afforded that member or alternate member
an opportunity to be heard or to make representations to him or her, remove
that member or alternate member from office if the Minister is satisfied
that such member or alternate member is for whatever reason unfit or unable
to effectively perform his or her functions on the Board or to represent
the interests which he or she is for the purposes of this Act required
to represent.
(4) If a member or
an alternate member of the Board for any reason ceases to hold office
before the expiry of his or her term of office, the Minister may, having
regard to the provisions of section 4, appoint another person in his or
her stead to hold office for the unexpired period of his or her term of
office.
Meetings and decisions
of Board
7. (1) The
first meeting of the Board shall be held at such time and place as the
chairperson of the Board may determine and thereafter meetings of the
Board shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (2), be held at such
times, but not less than three times in each financial year, and such
places as the Board may fix.
(2) The chairperson
of the Board may at any time, and shall at the request of the Minister
or on a reasoned request of at least five members of the Board, upon adequate
notice in writing, convene a special meeting of the Board, to be held
at such time and place as the chairperson may direct.
(3) The chairperson
of the Board or, in his or her absence, the vice-chairperson shall preside
at meetings of the Board at which he or she is present.
(4) If both the chairperson
and the vice-chairperson of the Board are absent from any meeting of the
Board, the members present thereat shall from among the voting members
of the Board elect one member to preside at such meeting.
(5) A quorum for
any meeting of the Board shall be four voting members of the Board, one
of whom shall be the member referred to in section 4(1)(a).
(6) The decision
of a majority of the voting members of the Board present at any meeting
of the Board shall constitute a decision of the Board, and, in the event
of an equality of votes in regard to any matter, the chairperson or other
person presiding at such meeting shall have a casting vote in addition
to his or her deliberative vote.
(7) No decision or
act of the Board or act performed by authority of the Board shall be invalid
by reason only -
(a) of the existence
of a vacancy on the Board; or
(b) of the fact that
a person who was not entitled to sit as a member of the Board sat as such
a member at the time when the decision was taken or the act was performed
or authorized, if the decision was taken or the act was performed or authorized
by the requisite majority of the voting members of the Board who were
present at the time and entitled to sit as such members.
(8) (a) The Board
shall cause proper record to be kept of the proceedings at its meetings.
(b) A copy of such
record shall be forwarded to the Minister at regular intervals.
(9) The Board may
make rules not inconsistent with the provisions of this Act relating to
the holding of and procedure at meetings of the Board.
(10) For the purposes
of this section "member" includes an alternate member present
at the relevant meeting of the Board during the absence or vacancy in
the office of the member to whom he or she has been appointed as alternate
member.
Committees of
Board
8. (1) The
Board may establish one or more committees of the Board to perform, subject
to the directions and control of the Board, such functions of the Board
as the Board may determine.
(2) (a) A committee
establish under subsection (1) shall consist of one or more members of
the Board, nominated by the Board for that purpose, and, if the Board
deems it necessary, one or more other persons not being a member or members
of the Board and whom the Board may consider fit to appoint to the committee.
(b) The Board may at any time dissolve or reconstitute such committee.
(3) If a committee
established under subsection (1) consists of more than one member, the
Board shall designate a member of the committee as chairperson thereof.
(4) The Board shall
not be absolved from responsibility for the performance of any functions
entrusted to any committee in terms of subsection (1).
Remuneration of
members of Board and committees
9. A member
or an alternate member of the Board, or a member of any committee of the
Board, who is not in the full-time employment of the State may be paid
out of the funds of the Board such remuneration and allowances as the
Board in consultation with the Minister may determine.
Powers, duties
and functions of Board
10. In addition
to the other powers, duties and functions conferred upon or assigned to
the Board by or under this Act, the Board may -
(a) hire, purchase
or otherwise acquire such movable or immovable property as the Board may
consider necessary for the performance of its functions and let, sell
or otherwise dispose of property so acquired: Provided that immovable
property shall not be purchased or otherwise acquired or sold or otherwise
disposed of without the prior written approval of the Minister;
(b) in furtherance
of its objects, purchase, sell or possess unpolished diamonds, and may
make such diamonds available to the Namibian Police Force for use in operations
aimed at the enforcement of the provisions of this Act;
(c) for the purpose
of the performance of its functions under this Act, enter into any agreement
with any person, including the State, for the performance of any particular
act or particular work or the rendering of particular services;
(d) by means of insurance
provide for cover for the Board against any loss, damage, risk or liability
which the Board may suffer or incur;
(e) in general perform
such other acts as may be necessary or expedient for the achievement of
its objects.
Establishment
of Diamond Board Fund
11. (1) There
is hereby established a fund to be known as the Diamond Board Fund, which
shall consist of -
(a) moneys obtained
by the Board by virtue of the provisions of this Act;
(b) moneys which
with the prior written approval of the Minister may accrue to the Board
from any other source; and
(c) interest derived
from moneys standing to the credit of the said Fund.
(2) The Board shall
utilize its funds contemplated in subsection (1) to defray the expenses
incurred by the Board in the performance of its functions under this Act.
(3) The Board shall
open one or more accounts with a financial institution, and shall deposit
into that account or those accounts the moneys received by it in terms
of subsection (1).
Accounting responsibility,
bookkeeping and annual statements, and unexpended balances
12. (1) The
Board shall be charged with the responsibility of accounting for moneys
received by the Board and payments made by the Board.
(2) The financial
year of the Board shall end on 31 December of each year.
(3) The Board shall
keep proper accounts and records of all moneys received or expended by
it, and of all its assets, liabilities and financial transactions.
(4) Subject to the
provisions of subsections (5) and (6), the Board shall as soon as possible,
but not later than three months after the end of each financial year,
prepare, or cause to be prepared, and submit to the Minister -
(a) annual financial
statements in respect of the financial year in question, together with
a report by the Auditor-General or, if appointed by the Auditor-General,
the auditor so appointed, relating to such statements; and
(b) a report on its
activities during that financial year.
(5) The annual financial
statements referred to in subsection (4)(a) shall contain -
(a) detailed particulars
of moneys received by the Board and expenditure incurred by the Board
during, and its assets and liabilities at the end of, the financial year
in question; and
(b) such additional
particulars as the Minister may determine.
(6) The accounts
and records and the annual financial statements referred to in subsections
(3) and (4)(a), respectively, shall be examined and audited by the Auditor-General
or by an auditor appointed for that purpose by the Auditor-General at
the expense of the Board.
(7) The Board shall,
not later than three months before the commencement of each financial
year, submit to the Minister a copy of its annual budget reflecting the
estimated expenditure of the Board for the next ensuing financial year:
Provided that the Board may at any time during any financial year submit
to the Minister an additional budget reflecting any additional expenditure
of the Board for that financial year.
(8) The Minister
shall lay upon the Table of the National Assembly all the statements and
reports (including the audit report) received by him or her in terms of
subsection (4), within 30 days from the date of receipt thereof, if the
National Assembly is then in ordinary session, or, if the National Assembly
is not then in ordinary session, within 14 days after the commencement
of its next ensuing ordinary session.
(9) Any unexpended
balance in the Diamond Board Fund at the close of each financial year
-
(a) not exceeding
an amount equal to the amount required for the estimated expenditure of
the Board for its next ensuing financial year, shall be carried forward
to the next ensuing financial year as a credit to the said Fund;
(b) exceeding an
amount equal to the amount required for the estimated expenditure of the
Board for its next ensuing financial year, shall -
(i) to the extent
that such balance does not exceed such amount, be carried forward as contemplated
in paragraph (a); (ii) to the extent that such balance exceeds such amount,
be deposited into the State Revenue Fund.
Levies payable
to Board
13. (1) In
order to defray the expenses incurred by the Board in the performance
of its functions under this Act, the Minister may from time to time, in
consultation with the Board, by notice in the Gazette impose a levy on
producers.
(2) A levy imposed
under subsection (1) shall -
(a) be payable to
the Board on or before such day as may be determined in the relevant notice;
(b) be expressed
as a percentage of the annual gross sales by producers; and
(c) be determined
with due regard to -
(i) the estimated
expenditure of the Board as reflected in its annual budget for the financial
year in question; and
(ii) the additional
expenditure of the Board as reflected in its additional budget for any
financial year.
PART
III
DIAMOND COMMISSIONER
Appointment, and
powers, duties and functions, of Diamond Commissioner
14. (1) The
Minister shall, on the recommendation of the Public Service Commission
and subject to the laws governing the Public Service, appoint a staff
member to be the Diamond Commissioner, who shall, subject to the directions
and control of the Minister -
(a) exercise the
powers and perform the duties and functions conferred upon or assigned
to the Commissioner by or under this Act; and
(b) perform such
other duties and functions as may be assigned to the Commissioner by the
Minister.
(2) The Commissioner
shall be assisted by such other staff members as the Permanent Secretary
may consider necessary to designate for that purpose.
(3) (a) The powers,
duties and functions conferred upon or assigned to the Commissioner by
or under this Act may be exercised or performed by the Commissioner personally
or, except in so far as the Commissioner otherwise determines, by any
staff member referred to in subsection (2) engaged in exercising or performing
any such power, duty or function subject to the directions and control
of the Commissioner.
(b) Notwithstanding
the provisions of paragraph (a), any power, duty or function conferred
upon or assigned to the Commissioner under section 29, in so far as it
relates to a permit referred to in section 27(k), may be exercised or
performed by any police official attached to that unit of the Namibian
Police Force charged with the protection of diamonds.
PART
IV
LICENCES
Kinds of licences
15. Subject
to the provisions of this Part, the Minister may grant the following licences,
namely -
(a) a diamond dealer's
licence entitling the holder to carry on business as a buyer, seller and
exporter of unpolished diamonds;
(b) a diamond cutting
licence entitling the holder to polish diamonds for the purpose of business
or trade;
(c) a diamond tool-making
licence entitling the holder to set unpolished diamonds in tools, implements
or other articles or to crush or to alter those diamonds for the purpose
of trade;
(d) a diamond research
licence entitling the holder to conduct research and tests in connection
with diamonds, but not to polish diamonds for the purpose of business
or trade.
Application for
licences
16. (1) An
applicant for a licence shall, subject to the provisions of subsection
(2), apply to the Minister on the prescribed form for such a licence:
Provided that, if the prospective licensee is a natural person, that person
shall be the applicant and, if the prospective licensee is a partnership,
the partners shall be the applicants.
(2) An application
in terms of subsection (1) shall -
(a) contain -
(i) such particulars as the Minister may prescribe;
and
(ii) such additional particulars relating to such application
as the Minister may reasonably require; and
(b) be accompanied
by the prescribed application fee.
(3) The Minister
may, before deciding on any application for a licence, conduct such investigation
regarding the application as he or she may deem fit.
(4) Subject to the
provisions of this Part, the Minister may at his or her discretion grant
or refuse an application for a licence made under subsection (1), but
the Minister shall -
(a) not grant any
application unless -
(i) the applicant, where the prospective licensee is
a natural person or partnership, is -
(aa) a Namibian citizen; or
(bb) permanently
resident in Namibia; and
has registered in Namibia as a tax-payer for income tax purposes: Provided
that, where the prospective licensee is a partnership, every partner thereof
shall be either a Namibian citizen or permanently resident in Namibia;
(ii) the applicant, where the prospective licensee is
a company or close corporation, is a company or close corporation incorporated
and registered under the applicable laws of Namibia and registered in
Namibia as a tax-payer for income tax purposes; or
(iii) the applicant, where the prospective licensee
is a company or close corporation to be incorporated and registered in
the event of an application for a licence under this section being granted,
has undertaken to incorporate and register such company or close corporation
under the applicable laws of Namibia and to register such company or close
corporation in Namibia as a tax-payer for income tax purposes;
(b) not grant any
application if -
(i) in the case of an applicant referred to in subsection
(4)(a)(i), the applicant, or, where the prospective licensee is a partnership,
any partner thereof, is a person referred to in section 5(b), (c), (d),
(e), (f) or (g), the provisions of which shall mutatis mutandis apply;
(ii) in the case of an applicant referred to in subsection
(4)(a)(ii), where the prospective licensee is a company, any director
thereof or any person holding a controlling interest therein, or, where
the prospective licensee is a close corporation, any member thereof or
any person holding a controlling interest therein, is a person referred
to in section 5(b), (c), (d), (e), (f) or (g), the provisions of which
shall mutatis mutandis apply;
(iii) in the case of an applicant referred to in subsection
(4)(a)(iii), where the prospective licensee is to be incorporated and
registered as a company, any prospective director thereof or any person
to hold a controlling interest therein, or, where the prospective licensee
is to be incorporated and registered as a close corporation, any prospective
member thereof or any person to hold a controlling interest therein, is
a person referred to in section 5(b), (c), (d), (e), (f) or (g), the provisions
of which shall mutatis mutandis apply;
(iv) in the case of any applicant, any person, who by
virtue of an agreement with the prospective licensee or by virtue of any
direct or indirect interest in the prospective licensee or by any other
means is able to exert influence over the conduct of the affairs of the
prospective licensee, is a person referred to in section 5(b), (c), (d),
(e), (f) or (g), the provisions of which shall mutatis mutandis apply;
or
(v)
the prospective licensee is a producer, contractor, sub-contractor, holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence,
or licensee;
(c) grant or refuse
such an application within six months from the date of receipt thereof.
(5) If the Minister
refuses an application for a licence, the Commissioner shall notify the
applicant in writing of the decision of the Minister.
(6) If the Minister
grants an application for a licence, he or she may determine any reasonable
condition in respect of such licence.
(7) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (8), the Minister may at any time after a licence
has been issued, and after having afforded a licensee an opportunity to
be heard, by notice in writing to the licensee -
(a) cancel or vary
any condition to which such licence is subject; or
(b) impose any reasonable
condition or any further reasonable condition in respect of such licence.
(8) Anything validly
done by virtue of a licence before the cancellation or variation of any
condition under subsection (7)(a) or the imposition of any condition or
further condition under subsection (7)(b), shall remain valid.
(9) If the Minister
grants an application for a licence to a prospective licensee referred
to in subsection (4)(a)(iii), the Minister shall specify a period within
which the undertaking referred to in that subsection shall be complied
with: Provided that the Minister may extend such period on good cause
shown.
Issue of licences
17. (1) If
the Minister grants an application for a licence under section 16(4),
the Commissioner shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (2), issue
to the applicant the licence on the prescribed form against payment of
the prescribed fee.
(2) No licence shall
be issued to a prospective licensee referred to in section 16(4)(a)(iii)
unless the undertaking referred to in that section has been complied with
within the period specified by the Minister in terms of section 16(9)
or, if such period has been extended by the Minister under the proviso
to the last-mentioned section, within such extended period.
(3) The Commissioner
shall endorse on a licence issued in terms of subsection (1) -
(a) any condition determined by the Minister under section 16(6);
(b) any cancellation, variation or condition referred to in section 16(7);
(c) particulars of the location of the business premises approved by the
Minister under section 18(1);
(d) any condition relating to such business premises determined by the
Minister under section 18(2).
(4) In order to give
effect to subsection (3)(b), (c) or (d), the Commissioner may request
a licensee in writing to submit the licence in question to the Commissioner
within 30 days from the date of such request.
(5) Any person who
fails to comply with a request under subsection (4) shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Business premises
18. (1) No licence
shall be issued unless the premises upon which the activities authorized
by such licence will be carried on have been approved by the Minister.
(2) The Minister
may conduct such investigation regarding the premises referred to in subsection
(1) as he or she may deem fit, and may determine any reasonable condition
subject to which such premises are approved.
(3) Any licensee
who desires to move or extend his or her business premises to any other
premises, or to materially alter his or her business premises, shall apply
to the Minister in writing for his or her approval of the new, additional
or altered premises, as the case may be: Provided that only alterations
which relate to or affect the activities authorized by the license in
question shall require the approval of the Minister.
(4) (a) After such
investigation regarding the new, additional or altered permises as the
Minister may deem fit, the Minister may grant, on such reasonable conditions
as he or she may determine, or refuse an application referred to in subsection
(3).
(b) Such an application
shall be granted or refused by the Minister within three months from the
date of receipt thereof.
(5) If the Minister
-
(a) grants an application
referred to in subsection (3), the Commissioner shall endorse on the licence
in question the particulars of the location of the new or additional premises,
as the case may be, and such conditions as the Minister may determine
under subsection (4); or
(b) refuses the application,
the Commissioner shall notify the licensee in writing of the decision
of the Minister.
(6) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (7), the Minister may at any time, after having
afforded a licensee an opportunity to be heard, by notice in writing to
the licensee -
(a) cancel or vary
any condition determined under subsection (2) or (4); or
(b) impose any reasonable
condition or any further reasonable condition in respect of any business
premises or any such new, additional or altered premises.
(7) Anything validly
done by virtue of a licence before the cancellation or variation of any
condition under subsection (6)(a) or the imposition of any condition or
further condition under subsection (6)(b), shall remain valid.
(8) The Commissioner
shall, in respect of the premises to which a licence relates, endorse
on such licence any cancellation or variation of a condition under subsection
(6)(a) or any condition or further condition imposed under subsection
(6)(b).
(9) In order to give
effect to subsection (8), the Commissioner may request a licensee in writing
to submit the licence in question to the Commissioner within 30 days from
the date of such request.
(10) Any person who
fails to comply with a request under subsection (9) shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Licensees to display
names and other particulars at business premises
19. Every
licensee shall display his or her name and a description indicating that
he or she is a licensed diamond dealer, diamond cutter, diamond tool-maker
or diamond researcher, as the case may be, in a conspicuous position and
in characters easily legible on the outside of his or her premises.
Period of validity
of licences and renewal of licences
20. (1) Subject
to the provisions of this Part -
(a) a diamond dealer's
licence shall be valid for such period, but not exceeding five years,
as the Minister may determine;
(b) a diamond cutting
licence shall be valid for such period, but not less than ten years, as
the Minister may determine;
(c) a diamond tool-making
licence shall be valid for such period, but not less than five years,
as the Minister may determine;
(d) a diamond research
licence shall be valid for such period as the Minister may determine.
(2) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (3), the provisions of this Part shall mutatis
mutandis apply in relation to an application for the renewal of a licence.
(3) An application
for the renewal of a licence shall be made not later than three months
before the date on which such licence will expire or such later date,
but not later than the date on which such licence will expire, as the
Minister may allow on good cause shown.
Transfer of licences
21. (1) Without
the prior written approval of the Minister having been applied for and
obtained, no licensee shall sell or otherwise dispose of his or her licence
or allow any other person to receive or acquire any direct or indirect
interest therein, nor shall any person so receive or acquire from a licensee
any licence or any direct or indirect interest therein.
(2) The provisions
of subsections (3), (4), (5) and (6) of section 16 shall mutatis mutandis
apply in respect of an application in terms of subsection (1) of this
section: Provided that in such application the expressions "applicant"
and "prospective licensee" in subsection (4) of section 16 shall
be construed as "person who is to receive or acquire any licence
or any direct or indirect interest therein".
(3) An application
for the written approval of the Minister referred to in subsection (1)
shall be accompanied by the licence in question.
(4) The Commissioner
shall endorse on the licence in question such alterations as are necessary
as a result of the sale or disposal of that licence or the receipt or
acquisition of any direct or indirect interest therein in terms of subsection
(1).
(5) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$250 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding five years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Controlling interest
in companies and close corporations
22. (1) Without
the prior written approval of the Minister having been applied for and
obtained, no person shall sell or otherwise dispose of, nor shall any
person receive or acquire, a controlling interest in any company or close
corporation after a licence has been issued or transferred in terms of
this Part to that company or close corporation.
(2) The provisions
of subsections (3), (4), (5) and (6) of section 16 shall mutatis mutandis
apply in respect of an application in terms of subsection (1) of this
section: Provided that in such application the expressions "applicant"
and "prospective licensee" in subsection (4) of section 16 shall
be construed as "person who is to receive or acquire a controlling
interest in a company or close corporation referred to in subsection (1)
of this section".
(3) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$250 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding five years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Conversions of
companies and close corporations
23. (1) A
licensee which -
(a) is a company
and is converted into another type or form of company or into a close
corporation; or
(b) is a close corporation
and is converted into a company,
shall, within 14
days after such conversion, submit its licence and the amended or new
certificate of incorporation or the new founding statement, or a certified
copy thereof, to the Commissioner.
(2) The Commissioner
shall endorse on the licence in question such alterations as are necessary
as a result of a conversion referred to in subsection (1).
(3) Any licensee
which fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
Preference to
be given to Namibian citizens, products and services
24. Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this Act or any other law contained, it shall
be a term and condition of -
(a) any licence,
that the holder of such licence;
(b) any approval
granted to a contractor or sub-contractor under section 49(4), that such
contractor or sub-contractor,
shall -
(i) with due regard
to efficiency, economy and practicability, in the employment of employees,
give preference to Namibian citizens who possess appropriate qualifications,
expertise and experience for purposes of the operations to be carried
on by such licence holder, contractor or sub-contractor, as the case may
be, and employ persons who are not Namibian citizens only where the qualifications,
expertise and experience required for such employment cannot be obtained
by recruitment of Namibian citizens;
(ii) with due regard
to efficiency, economy and practicability, give preference to the procurement
of products, materials or equipment manufactured or produced in Namibia,
and of services from service providers located in Namibia;
(iii) with due regard
to efficiency, economy and practicability carry out training programs
in order to encourage and promote the development of Namibian citizens
employed by such licence holder, contractor or sub-contractor, as the
case may be;
(iv) in the fulfilment
of the obligations in terms of paragraphs (i), (ii) and (iii), have due
regard to the advancement of persons within Namibia who have been socially,
economically or educationally disadvantaged by past discriminatory laws
or practices.
Suspension and
cancellation of licences
25. (1) If
-
(a) an applicant
for a licence has furnished information to the Minister in or in connection
with an application for a licence which is in any material respect untrue
and a licence is subsequently issued in terms of section 17(1) in respect
of such application;
(b) a licensee has
sold or otherwise disposed of his or her licence or has allowed any other
person to receive or acquire an interest therein without the prior written
approval of the Minister having been obtained in terms of section 21(1);
(c) a controlling
interest was sold or otherwise disposed of or received or acquired in
a licensee which is a company or close corporation without the prior written
approval of the Minister having been obtained in terms of section 22(1);
(d) an applicant
for written approval of the Minister in terms of section 18(3), 21(1),
22(1), 38(1)(c) or (2)(c) or 41(1) has furnished information to the Minister
in or in connection with such application which is in any material respect
untrue;
(e) a licensee has
contravened or failed to comply with a condition of the licence or a provision
of this Act;
(f) a licensee becomes
subject to any disqualification or no longer complies with any requirement
contemplated in section 16(4)(a)(i), (ii) or (iii) or (4)(b)(i), (ii),
(iii), (iv) or (v); or
(g) a licensee has
ceased to carry on the activities authorized by the licence,
the Minister shall
by notice in writing request the licensee to show cause within the period
specified in that notice, but not being less than 30 days after the date
of that notice, why the licence in question should not be suspended or
cancelled.
(2) Upon the expiry
of the period referred to in subsection (1), the Minister may -
(a) suspend the licence
in question for such period as he or she may determine; or
(b) cancel that licence
with effect from such date as he or she may determine.
(3) Notwithstanding
the provisions of subsection (2), anything validly done by virtue of a
licence before such suspension or cancellation, shall remain valid.
(4) While a licence
is suspended under subsection (2)(a), the licensee concerned shall be
deemed not to be licenced.
(5) The Minister
shall cancel the licence of a licensee if requested to do so by the licensee.
(6) If a licensee
becomes subject to any disqualification or no longer complies with any
requirement contemplated in section 16(4)(a)(i), (ii) or (iii) or (4)(b)(i),
(ii), (iii), (iv) or (v), such licensee shall, within 14 days after becoming
subject to any such disqualification or no longer complying with any such
requirement, inform the Minister thereof in writing.
(7) For the purposes
of paragraphs (e) and (f) of subsection (1) "licensee" includes
-
(a) where the licensee
is a partnership, any partner thereof; or
(b) where the licensee
is a company, any director thereof or any person holding a controlling
interest therein; or
(c) where the licensee
is a close corporation, any member thereof or any person holding a controlling
interest therein.
(8) A licensee who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (6) shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Return of licences
26. (1) If
the Minister suspends or cancels a licence under section 25(2), the Commissioner
shall notify the licensee in writing of the decision of the Minister.
(2) Any licensee
who has ceased to carry on the activities authorized by his or her licence
or whose licence has been suspended or cancelled under section 25(2) shall,
within 30 days after having ceased to carry on such activities or after
having received notification of such suspension or cancellation, return
his or her licence to the Commissioner.
(3) Any licensee
who fails to comply with a provision of subsection (2) shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
PART
V
PERMITS
Kinds of permits
27. Subject
to the provisions of section 28(1), the Minister may grant a permit authorizing
any person who is not otherwise so authorized by or under any provision
of this Act -
(a) to possess an
unpolished diamond; (b) to sell or otherwise dispose of an unpolished
diamond which he or she has lawfully in his or her possession;
(c) to receive or
purchase an unpolished diamond which is in the lawful possession of the
person from whom it is to be received or purchased;
(d) to export an
unpolished diamond;
(e) to import an
unpolished diamond;
(f) to polish any
diamond or crush or set any unpolished diamond in any tool, implement
or other article;
(g) to possess any
diamondiferous concentrate outside a restricted area;
(h) to export any
diamondiferous concentrate;
(i) to remove any
sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral from a restricted area;
(j) to export any
sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral which it is reasonably
believed may contain diamonds;
(k) to enter, reside,
travel, work or be in, or to visit a restricted area,
subject to any condition
contained in such permit.
Application for
permits
28. (1) An
applicant for a permit shall apply to the Minister on the prescribed form
for such a permit.
(2) An application
in terms of subsection (1) shall -
(a) contain -
(i) such particulars as the Minister may prescribe; and
(ii) such additional particulars relating to such application as the Minister
may reasonably require; and
(b) be accompanied
by the prescribed application fee.
(3) The Minister
may at his or her discretion grant or refuse an application for a permit
made under subsection (1): Provided that in the case of an application
for a permit contemplated in section 27(k), any refusal by the Minister
of such an application shall only be on reasonable grounds of security
in the restricted area in question.
(4) If the Minister
refuses an application for a permit, the Commissioner shall notify the
applicant in writing of the decision of the Minister.
(5) If the Minister
grants an application for a permit, he or she may, subject to the provisions
of section 67(3), determine any condition in respect of such permit.
(6) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (7), the Minister may at any time after a permit
has been issued, and after having afforded the holder of a permit an opportunity
to be heard, by notice in writing to such holder of a permit - (a) cancel
or vary any condition to which such permit is subject;
(b) impose any reasonable
condition or any further reasonable condition in respect of such permit;
or
(c) cancel such permit:
Provided that a permit
contemplated in section 27(k) shall be cancelled only -
(i) on reasonable
grounds of security in the restricted area in question; and
(ii) on reasonable
notice in writing to the holder of such permit.
(7) Anything validly
done by virtue of a permit before the cancellation or variation of any
condition under subsection (6)(a) or the imposition of any condition or
further condition under subsection (6)(b) or the cancellation of such
permit under subsection (6)(c), shall remain valid: Provided that where
a permit contemplated in section 27(a) is cancelled, the Minister shall
give directions regarding the sale or disposal of any unpolished diamond
in respect of which such permit is cancelled: Provided further that such
former permit holder shall not by virtue only of such cancellation be
considered to have been or to be unlawfully in possession of any unpolished
diamond in respect of which such permit is cancelled.
Issue of permits
29. (1) If
the Minister grants an application for a permit under section 28(3), the
Commissioner shall, against payment of the prescribed fee, issue to the
applicant the permit on the prescribed form.
(2) The Commissioner
shall endorse on a permit issued in terms of subsection (1) -
(a) any condition
determined by the Minister under section 28(5);
(b) any cancellation,
variation or condition referred to in section 28(6).
(3) In order to give
effect to subsection (2)(b), the Commissioner shall request the holder
of a permit in writing to submit the permit in question to the Commissioner
within 30 days from the date of such request.
(4) Every person
to whom a permit has been issued in terms of subsection (1) shall, at
the expiry of such permit, return such permit to the Commissioner.
(5) Any person who
-
(a) contravenes or
fails to comply with a condition of a permit issued in terms of subsection
(1); or
(b) fails to comply
with a request under subsection (3); or
(c) fails to comply
with a provision of subsection (4),
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
(6) A permit issued
in terms of subsection (1) shall not be transferable to any other person.
PART
VI
CONTROL MEASURES IN RELATION TO UNPOLISHED DIAMONDS
Prohibition relating
to possession of unpolished diamonds
30. (1) Save
as is otherwise provided in this Act, no person shall have any unpolished
diamond in his or her possession unless such person is -
(a) a producer, contractor
or sub-contractor who has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance
with the provisions of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act, proof
of which shall be on such producer, contractor or sub-contractor, as the
case may be;
(b) the holder of
an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence
who has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance with the terms
and conditions of any such licence, proof of which shall be on such holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence;
(c) a licensee;
(d) in respect of
that diamond the holder of a permit referred to in section 27(a), (b),
(c), (d), (e) or (f); or
(e) in possession
of that diamond while acting in the course and scope of or in the execution
of a lawful agreement to which any person referred to in paragraph (a),
(b), (c) or (d) is a party, proof of which shall be on such first-mentioned
person.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
(3) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in this Act contained, any natural person referred
to in paragraph (a), (b), (c), (d) or (e) of subsection (1) shall, while
he or she has any unpolished diamond in his or her possession, carry on
his or her person or have readily available in his or her immediate vicinity
such documents in such circumstances as the Minister may prescribe.
(4) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (3) shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to such penalty as the Minister
may prescribe.
Prohibition relating
to sale or disposal of unpolished diamonds
31. (1) Save
as is otherwise provided in this Act, no person shall sell or otherwise
dispose of any unpolished diamond unless such person is -
(a) a producer who
has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance with the provisions
of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act, proof of which shall be
on such producer;
(b) the holder of
an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence
who has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance with the terms
and conditions of any such licence, proof of which shall be on such holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence;
(c) a dealer;
(d) the holder of
a permit referred to in section 27(b); or
(e) an authorized
representative of any person referred to in paragraph (a), (b), ( c) or
(d) and acting within the scope of his or her duties as such an authorized
representative.
(2) The provisions
of subsection (1) shall not be construed so as to authorize such producer,
licence holder, dealer, permit holder or authorized representative to
sell any unpolished diamond which has come into his or her possession
in an unlawful manner.
(3) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Prohibition relating
to receipt or purchase of unpolished diamonds
32. (1) Save
as is otherwise provided in this Act, no person shall receive or purchase
any unpolished diamond unless such person is -
(a) a licensee;
(b) the holder of
a permit referred to in section 27(c); or
(c) an authorized
representative of any person referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) and acting
within the scope of his or her duties as such an authorized representative.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Dealing in unpolished
diamonds restricted to certain persons
33. Save as
is otherwise provided in this Act, any person -
(a) referred to in
section 31(1) who sells or otherwise disposes of any unpolished diamond
to any person other than a person referred to in section 32(1);
(b) referred to in
section 32(1) who receives or purchases any unpolished diamond from any
person other than a person referred to in section 31(1),
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
Illegal acts relating
to receipt or purchase of unpolished diamonds
34. Any licensee
or holder of a permit referred to in section 27(c), or any authorized
representative of such licensee or holder of a permit, who receives or
purchases any unpolished diamond -
(a) for any purpose
other than the activities authorized by the relevant licence or permit,
as the case may be; or
(b) from any person
not lawfully in possession of that diamond knowing that such person is
not lawfully in such possession; or (c) from any person not lawfully in
possession of that diamond without having reasonable grounds, proof of
which shall be on such licensee, holder of a permit or authorized representative,
for believing at the time of such receipt or purchase that such diamond
is lawfully in possession of the person from whom it is received or purchased,
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
Prohibition relating
to polishing, crushing or setting of unpolished diamonds
35. (1) No
person shall polish any diamond or crush or set any unpolished diamond
in any tool, implement or other article unless such person is -
(a) a cutter, tool-maker
or researcher acting in the course and scope of the activities authorized
by his or her licence;
(b) an employee acting
in the course and scope of his or her employment with such cutter, tool-maker
or researcher;
(c) the holder of
a permit referred to in section 27(f) acting in the course and scope of
the activities authorized by such permit; or
(d) acting in the
course and scope of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which
any person referred to in paragraph (a) or (c) is a party, proof of which
shall be on such first-mentioned person.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Prohibition relating
to export of unpolished diamonds
36. (1) No
person shall export any unpolished diamond from Namibia unless such person
is -
(a) a producer who
has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance with the provisions
of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act, proof of which shall be
on such producer;
(b) the holder of
an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence
who has won, recovered or found that diamond in accordance with the terms
and conditions of any such licence, proof of which shall be on such holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence;
(c) a dealer;
(d) the holder of
a permit referred to in section 27(d); or
(e) acting in the
course and scope of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which
any person referred to in paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d) is a party, proof
of which shall be on such first-mentioned person.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Prohibition relating
to import of unpolished diamonds
37. (1) Subject
to the provisions of subsection (2), no person shall import any unpolished
diamond into Namibia unless such person is the holder of a permit referred
to in section 27(e).
(2) The provisions
of subsection (1) shall not apply in respect of any unpolished diamond
won or recovered outside Namibia from diamondiferous concentrate, sand,
soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral previously exported from Namibia
and which is returned to Namibia in terms of section 54(2) or 56(2), as
the case may be, proof of which shall be on the person who is so returning
that unpolished diamond.
(3) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Dealings in unpolished
diamonds restricted to approved premises
38. (1) No
producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or a non-exclusive
prospecting licence, dealer or holder of a permit referred to in section
27(b) shall sell or otherwise dispose of any unpolished diamond elsewhere
than on -
(a) the business
premises of a licensee;
(b) the premises
referred to in subsection (2)(c); or
(c) such other premises
as the Minister may approve under section 39 on application in writing
by such producer, licence holder, dealer or permit holder.
(2) No licensee or
holder of a permit referred to in section 27(c) shall receive or purchase
any unpolished diamond elsewhere than on -
(a) the business
premises of a licensee;
(b) the premises
referred to in subsection (1)(c); or
(c) such other premises
as the Minister may approve under section 39 on application in writing
by such licensee or holder of a permit.
(3) Any person who
contravenes a provision of this section shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Approval of premises
for purposes of dealing in unpolished diamonds
39. (1) If
an application for the approval of premises is made to the Minister in
terms of section 38(1)(c) or (2)(c), the Minister may conduct such investigation
regarding the application as he or she may deem fit.
(2) (a) The Minister
may at his or her discretion grant, on such reasonable conditions as he
or she may determine, or refuse an application for the approval of premises.
(b) Such an application
shall be granted or refused by the Minister within 30 days from the date
of receipt thereof.
(3) If the Minister
refuses an application for the approval of premises, the Commissioner
shall notify the applicant in writing of the decision of the Minister.
(4) If the Minister grants an application for the approval of premises,
the Commissioner shall issue to the applicant concerned a certificate
of approval in respect of the premises on the prescribed form.
(5) The Commissioner
shall endorse on a certificate of approval issued in terms of subsection
(4) any condition determined by the Minister under subsection (2).
(6) Any person who
contravenes or fails to comply with a condition of a certificate of approval
-
(a) issued in terms
of subsection (4); or
(b) issued in terms
of the said subsection (4) as applied by section 41(2) to cutters, tool-makers
and researchers,
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Processing of
and research and tests in connection with unpolished diamonds restricted
to approved premises
40. (1) No
cutter, tool-maker or holder of a permit referred to in section 27(f)
shall polish any diamond or crush or set any unpolished diamond in any
tool, implement or other article or permit any such process to be conducted
on his or her behalf, nor shall any researcher conduct any research or
tests in connection with any unpolished diamond or permit any such research
or tests to be conducted on his or her behalf, elsewhere than on -
(a) his or her business
premises; or
(b) such other premises
as the Minister may approve under section 41 on application in writing
by such cutter, tool-maker, holder of a permit or researcher.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Approval of premises
for purposes of processing or conducting research and tests in connection
with unpolished diamonds
41. (1) Any
-
(a) cutter may apply
in writing to the Minister to polish diamonds;
(b) tool-maker may
apply in writing to the Minister to set unpolished diamonds in tools,
implements or other articles or to crush or to alter those diamonds for
the purpose of trade;
(c) researcher may
apply in writing to the Minister to do research and tests in connection
with diamonds, but not to polish diamonds for the purpose of business
or trade,
on such premises
other than his or her business premises as the Minister may approve.
(2) The provisions
of section 39 shall mutatis mutandis apply in respect of an application
for the approval of premises under subsection (1).
Dealings in unpolished
diamonds on behalf of other persons restricted to authorized representatives
42. (1) No
person shall purchase, sell, receive or dispose of any unpolished diamond
on behalf of any other person unless such first-mentioned person is -
(a) a natural person;
and
(b) registered as
an authorized representative of such other person in terms of section
43.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Application for
registration of authorized representatives
43. (1) Any
person who is in terms of this Act entitled to purchase, sell, receive
or dispose of any unpolished diamonds and who wishes to appoint another
natural person as his or her authorized representative to purchase, sell,
receive or dispose of any unpolished diamonds on his or her behalf, shall
apply to the Minister on the prescribed form for the registration of such
other person as his or her authorized representative.
(2) An application
in terms of subsection (1) shall contain -
(a) such particulars
as the Minister may prescribe; and
(b) such additional
particulars relating to such application as the Minister may reasonably
require.
(3) The Minister
may conduct such investigation regarding an application for the registration
of an authorized representative as he or she may deem fit.
(4) The Minister
may at his or her discretion grant or refuse an application for the registration
of an authorized representative, but the Minister shall-
(a) not granted any
such application if he or she is of the opinion-
(i) that the person
in respect of whom the application is made is a person referred to in
section 5 (b), (c), (d), (e), (f) or (g), the provisions of which shall
mutatis mutandis apply;
(ii) that the person
in respect of whom the application is made does not comply with the prescribed
requirements; or
(iii) that a sufficient
number of authorized representatives have already been registered in respect
of the applicant;
(b) grant or refuse
such an application within 30 days from the date of receipt thereof.
(5) If the Minister
refuses an application for the registration of an authorized representative,
the Commissioner shall notify the applicant in writing of the decision
of the Minister.
(6) If the Minister
grants an application for the registration of an authorized representative,
he or she may determine any condition in respect of such registration.
(7) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (8), the Minister may by notice in writing to
an authorized representative and to the person he or she is authorized
to represent at any time -
(a) cancel or vary
any condition determined under subsection (6); or
(b) impose any reasonable
condition or any further reasonable condition in respect of the registration
of such authorized representative.
(8) Anything validly
done by an authorized representative before the cancellation or variation
of any condition under subsection (7)(a) or the imposition of any condition
or further condition under subsection (7)(b), shall remain valid.
(9) If the Minister
grants an application referred to in subsection (1), the Commissioner
shall register the natural person concerned as an authorized representative
of the applicant and issue to the applicant a certificate of registration
as an authorized representative of the applicant on the prescribed form.
(10) Whenever an
authorized representative is engaged in any activity within the scope
of his or her duties as such an authorized representative, he or she shall,
at the request of any person affected by such activity, produce his or
her certificate of registration to such person for inspection.
(11) If -
(a) an authorized
representative or the person he or she is authorized to represent has
contravened or failed to comply with a condition of registration determined
or imposed under subsection (6) or (7); or
(b) an authorized
representative becomes subject to any disqualification or no longer complies
with any requirement contemplated in paragraphs (a) and (b), respectively,
of subsection (4),
the Minister may
by notice in writing request the authorized representative and the person
he or she is authorized to represent, to show cause within the period
specified in that notice, but not being less than 30 days after the date
of that notice, why the registration in question should not be suspended
or cancelled.
(12) Upon the expiry
of the period referred to in subsection (11), the Minister may -
(a) suspend the registration
in question for such period as he or she may determine; or
(b) cancel that registration
with effect from such date as he or she may determine.
(13) Any person who
has appointed a registered authorized representative shall, upon termination
of such appointment, inform the Minister in writing of such termination.
(14) Whenever an
authorized representative ceases to be such, he or she shall, within 30
days after having ceased to be such, return his or her certificate of
registration to the Commissioner.
(15) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1), (10), (13) or (14)
shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not
exceeding N$100 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two
years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Unpolished diamonds
sold or disposed of to processors of diamonds to be valued and sealed
before delivery
44. (1) Whenever
any person referred to in section 31(1) sells or otherwise disposes of
any unpolished diamond to a cutter, tool-maker, researcher or holder of
a permit referred to in section 27(f), or to any authorized representative
of such cutter, tool-maker, researcher or holder of a permit, such person
shall, before delivery of the unpolished diamond, submit that diamond
to the Minister for determination of its market value in terms of subsection
(2).
(2) For the purpose
of subsection (1), the market value of any unpolished diamond shall be
determined in writing by the Minister having regard to the value agreed
upon between the person who sells or otherwise disposes of that diamond
and the person to whom that diamond is sold or otherwise disposed of in
an at arm's-length sale and prices which are in the opinion of the Minister
at the particular time paid on international markets for such diamonds,
less any amounts deducted in respect of fees, charges or levies which
are in the opinion of the Minister charged on international markets.
(3) After valuation
in terms of the preceding subsections, the unpolished diamond in question
shall, before being released for sale or disposal, be made up in a parcel
and sealed in such manner as the Minister may prescribe or otherwise determine.
(4) The person who
sells or otherwise disposes of the unpolished diamond sealed in terms
of subsection (3) shall deliver, and the person who receives or purchases
that diamond shall take delivery of, that diamond in the sealed parcel
referred to in that subsection.
(5) If the sale or
disposal of any unpolished diamond contained in a sealed parcel referred
to in subsection (3) is subsequently cancelled or rescinded, that sealed
parcel shall be dealt with in such manner as the Minister may prescribe
in general or direct in particular.
(6) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1), (4) or (5) shall be
guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding
N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years
or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Unpolished diamonds
to be valued and sealed before export
45. (1) Subject
to the provisions of subsection (2), no person shall export any unpolished
diamond from Namibia unless that diamond has been submitted to the Minister
for determination of its market value in terms of subsection (3).
(2) The provisions
of subsection (1) shall not apply in respect of diamondiferous concentrate
or any sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral which may contain
unpolished diamonds.
(3) For the purpose
of subsection (1), the market value of any unpolished diamond shall be
determined in writing by the Minister having regard to the value agreed
upon between the person who sells or otherwise disposes of that diamond
and the person to whom that diamond is sold or otherwise disposed of in
an at arm's-length sale and prices which are in the opinion of the Minister
at the particular time paid on international markets for such diamonds,
less any amounts deducted in respect of fees, charges or levies which
are in the opinion of the Minister charged on international markets.
(4) (a) After valuation
in terms of subsections (1) and (3), the unpolished diamond in question
shall, before being released for export, be made up in a parcel and sealed
in such manner as the Minister may prescribe or otherwise determine.
(b) The unpolished
diamond so sealed -
(i) shall not be
dealt with otherwise than to be exported;
(ii) shall not be
exported otherwise than in that sealed parcel.
(5) Any person who
contravenes or fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1) or (4)(b)
shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not
exceeding N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty
years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Registers in respect
of unpolished diamonds
46. (1) Every
producer, contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence and licensee shall at the
prescribed place or places keep or cause to be kept the prescribed register,
in which shall be entered the prescribed particulars in respect of unpolished
diamonds: Provided that the holder of an exclusive prospecting licence
or a non-exclusive prospecting licence shall keep or cause to be kept
such register only from such time as he or she has first won, recovered
or found unpolished diamonds in accordance with the terms and conditions
of any such licence.
(2) Every entry referred
to in subsection (1) shall be made immediately after the occurrence of
the event recorded, or within such longer period as the Minister may authorize
in writing.
(3) Every person
required to keep a register in terms of subsection (1) shall, within 14
days after the end of each month, transmit or deliver to the Commissioner
a true copy of such register kept in respect of that month, together with
a solemn declaration in writing of the truth and correctness thereof.
(4) Every person
required to keep a register in terms of subsection (1) shall retain such
register for a period of at least three years after the date on which
the last entry was recorded therein.
(5) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of this section shall be guilty of an
offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Notes of receipt
or purchase in respect of unpolished diamonds
47. (1) Whenever
any licensee or holder of a permit referred to in section 27(c) receives
or purchases, whether through an authorized representative or otherwise,
any unpolished diamond, such licensee or holder of a permit shall forthwith
complete in duplicate a note of receipt or purchase on the prescribed
form.
(2) The original
of every note of receipt or purchase completed in terms of subsection
(1) shall be handed over to the person who delivered or sold the unpolished
diamond, and the copy thereof shall be retained by the licensee or holder
of a permit who so completed such notice for a period of at least three
years after the date on which he or she received or purchased the unpolished
diamond.
(3) Whenever any
person referred to in paragraph (a), (b), (c) or (d) of section 31(1)
delivers or sells, whether through an authorized representative or otherwise,
any unpolished diamond he or she shall require the person to whom the
unpolished diamond is delivered or sold to hand over to him or her the
original of every note of receipt or purchase completed in terms of subsection
(1), and he or she shall retain such original note for a period of at
least three years after the date on which he or she delivered or sold
the unpolished diamond.
(4) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of this section shall be guilty of an
offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Security check
of persons employed or engaged in certain activities relating to unpolished
diamonds
48. (1) No
producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee shall
permit any employee or other natural person to engage in any activity
or operation of or on behalf of such producer, holder of an exclusive
prospecting licence or licensee which is related to the winning, recovery,
possession, purchase, sale, disposal, export, delivery, receipt, processing,
sampling or handling of unpolished diamonds, or which is such that it
would be reasonable to foresee that any such employee or natural person
may have access to unpolished diamonds unless -
(a) such producer,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee has performed a
security check on such employee or natural person in the prescribed manner;
and
(b) the results of
such security check indicate that such employee or natural person is according
to the prescribed criteria suitable to be engaged in such activity or
operation.
(2) If at any time
any employee or natural person referred to in subsection (1) who is engaged
in any activity or operation contemplated in that subsection has pursuant
to a security check referred to in paragraph (a) of that subsection become
unsuitable to be so engaged, the producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence or licensee on whose behalf such activity or operation is being
carried out, shall forthwith ensure that such employee or natural person
ceases to be so engaged.
(3) Any producer,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee who contravenes
or fails to comply with a provision of this section shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Approval of contractors
and sub-contractors
49. (1) No
-
(a) producer or holder
of an exclusive prospecting licence shall enter into any agreement with
any person whereby such person would become a contractor;
(b) contractor or
sub-contractor shall enter into any agreement with any person whereby
such person would become a sub-contractor,
unless, in the case
of an agreement in terms of paragraph (a), the producer or holder of the
exclusive prospecting licence, or, in the case of an agreement in terms
of paragraph (b), the producer or holder of the exclusive prospecting
licence on whose behalf any unpolished diamonds are ultimately to be won,
recovered or prospected for, has applied for and obtained the written
approval of the Minister of such person.
(2) Any application
in terms of subsection (1) shall contain such particulars relating to
such application as the Minister may reasonably require.
(3) The Minister
may, before deciding on any application for approval in terms of subsection
(1), conduct such investigation regarding the application as he or she
may deem fit.
(4) The Minister
may at his or her discretion grant or refuse an application for approval
made under subsection (1), but the Minister shall refuse such application
if he or she is satisfied that the person in respect of whom the application
is made is subject to any disqualification contemplated in section 5(d),
(e), (f) or (g), the provisions of which shall mutatis mutandis apply
.
(5) (a) The Commissioner
shall notify the applicant in writing of the decision of the Minister
under subsection (4).
(b) If such approval
is granted, the agreement to which such approval relates may be entered
into.
(6) The approval
and notification required in terms of subsections (1) and (5)(a), respectively,
shall be given to the applicant within 60 days from the date of the application
for approval, failing which, the agreement to which such application relates
may be entered into without such approval and notification.
(7) If at any time
a contractor or sub-contractor becomes subject to any disqualification
referred to in subsection (4), or fails to comply with any term or condition
referred to in section 24, the Minister shall by notice in writing request
such contractor or sub-contractor and the person with whom such contractor
or sub-contractor has entered into an agreement under subsection (5)(b)
to show cause within the period specified in that notice, but not being
less than 30 days after the date of that notice, why the approval granted
to him or her should not be suspended or revoked.
(8) Upon the expiry
of the period referred to in subsection (7), the Minister may -
(a) suspend the approval
in question for such period as he or she may determine; or
(b) revoke that approval
with effect from such date as he or she may determine.
(9) If the Minister
suspends or revokes an approval under subsection (8), all activities under
the agreement to which such approval relates shall forthwith be suspended.
(10) For the purposes
of subsection (4) "person", and for the purposes of subsection
(7) "contractor" and "sub-contractor", includes -
(a) in the case of
a partnership, any partner thereof; or
(b) in the case of
a company, any director thereof or any person holding a controlling interest
therein; or
(c) in the case of
a close corporation, any member thereof or any person holding a controlling
interest therein; or
(d) any other person
who, by virtue of an agreement with the person referred to in subsection
(4) or with the contractor or sub-contractor referred to in subsection
(7) or by virtue of any direct or indirect interest in such last-mentioned
person or such contractor or sub-contractor or by any other means, is
able to exert influence over the conduct of the affairs of such last-mentioned
person or such contractor or sub-contractor, as the case may be.
(11) A contractor
or sub-contractor shall without delay inform the Minister and the producer
or holder of an exclusive prospecting licence concerned in writing -
(a) in the case of
a contractor or sub-contractor who is a natural person, whenever he or
she, or any of his or her employees engaged in his or her activities or
operations as such a contractor or sub-contractor, as the case may be,
become subject to any disqualification contemplated in section 5(d), (e)
or (f), the provisions of which shall mutatis mutandis apply; or
(b) in the case of
a contractor or sub-contractor which is a partnership, company or close
corporation -
(i) of any changes
of its partners, directors or members, or any person referred to in subsection
(10)(b), (c) or (d), as the case may be;
(ii) whenever any
of its partners, directors or members, or any person referred to in subsection
(10)(b), (c) or (d), as the case may be, becomes subject to any disqualification
contemplated in section 5(d), (e) or (f), the provisions of which shall
mutatis mutandis apply.
(12) The provisions
of subsections (7), (8), (9) and (10), in so far as subsection (10) refers
to subsection (7), and of subsection (11) shall mutatis mutandis apply
to any person who at the date of commencement of this Act is a contractor
or sub-contractor.
(13) Any person who
contravenes or fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1), (9)
or (11) shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a
fine not exceeding N$250 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
five years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Approval of security
plan
50. (1) Every
producer, contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence and licensee shall within a reasonable period submit for approval
by the Minister a security plan in which are set out such particulars
as the Minister may prescribe in relation to -
(a) security systems
or procedures regarding the security, transport and safe-keeping of unpolished
diamonds;
(b) security systems
regarding the movement of employees and other persons in the relevant
area of operations or business premises; (c) any other relevant security
systems or procedures,
which are to be followed
or put in place or maintained.
(2) The Minister
may grant or refuse approval of a security plan submitted in terms of
subsection (1), but, if approval is refused, the Minister shall -
(a) provide reasonable
instructions, standards or guidelines with which the security plan should
comply; and
(b) determine a reasonable
period for compliance with such instructions, standards or guidelines.
(3) (a) Unless the Minister otherwise directs, a producer, contractor,
sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee
may, pending a decision by the Minister under this section, commence or
continue operations.
(b) Notwithstanding
the provisions of paragraph (a), if any instructions, standards or guidelines
provided by the Minister in terms of subsection (2)(a) have not been complied
with within the period determined by the Minister in terms of subsection
(2)(b), the producer, contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive
prospecting licence or licensee concerned shall forthwith discontinue
such operations unless good cause is shown why such operations should
not be discontinued.
(4) The Minister
may grant approval of a security plan subject to such conditions as he
or she may determine.
(5) The Minister
may at any time after approval of a security plan has been granted -
(a) cancel or vary
any condition to which such approval is subject; or
(b) impose any reasonable
condition or any further reasonable condition in respect of such approval,
if the results of an investigation or inspection by the Minister indicate
that it would be appropriate to impose such a condition.
(6) No producer,
contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence
or licensee shall, without the prior written approval of the Minister,
amend his or her security plan approved under subsection (2).
(7) Any producer,
contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence
or licensee who -
(a) contravenes or
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1), (3)(b) or (6); or
(b) materially fails
to comply with any provision of his or her security plan approved under
subsection (2); or
(c) fails to comply
with a direction under subsection (3)(a),
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Unpolished diamonds
found or picked up by chance
51. (1) Any
person who by chance finds or picks up any unpolished diamond at any place
outside a restricted area where such person is not permitted to prospect
or mine for diamonds in terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining)
Act, shall forthwith take that diamond to the nearest police official
on duty and deliver it to him or her.
(2) If the Inspector-General
or any other police official designated by him or her -
(a) is satisfied
that a person is the owner of a diamond referred to in subsection (1)
or is entitled to be in possession thereof, he or she shall deliver that
diamond to such person; or
(b) is not so satisfied,
he or she shall cause a notice to be published in the Gazette,and in one
newspaper circulating in the magistrate's court district in which that
diamond was allegedly found or picked up, calling upon any person who
may be the owner of that diamond or entitled to be in possession thereof
to prove his or her ownership or right of possession.
(3) If no person
furnishes proof to the satisfaction of the Inspector-General or designated
police official of his or her ownership or right of possession within
21 days after the date of publication of the later of the two notices
referred to in subsection (2)(b), the Inspector-General or designated
police official shall cause the diamond in question to be sold and the
proceeds thereof shall, subject to the provisions of subsection (4), be
paid into the State Revenue Fund.
(4) If the Inspector-General
or designated police official is satisfied that the diamond in question
was found or picked up in the circumstances contemplated in subsection
(1), he or she shall pay to the person who so found or picked up that
diamond an amount calculated at one-third of the amount realized at the
sale in terms of subsection (3).
(5) Whenever a diamond
has been delivered in terms of subsection (2)(a) to the owner of such
diamond or the person entitled to be in possession thereof, such owner
or person shall within 60 days of such delivery pay to the person who
so found or picked up the diamond by chance an amount calculated at one-third
of the fair market value of such diamond as determined by the Minister.
(6) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1) or (5) shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable -
(a) in the case of
a conviction under subsection (1), to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment; or
(b) in the case of
a conviction under subsection (5), to a fine not exceeding N$100 000 or
to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Restricted areas
52. (1) The
areas referred to in subsection (2) shall for the purposes of this Act
be restricted areas in which, except as hereinafter in this section provided,
no person other than -
(a) a member of the
Namibian Police Force;
(b) an inspector
of mines appointed as such under section 4(2) of the Mines, Works and
Minerals Ordinance, 1968 (Ordinance No. 20 of 1968);
(c) the Commissioner;
(d) a diamond inspector;
(e) the Mining Commissioner
appointed as such under section 4(1) of the Minerals (Prospecting and
Mining) Act and any officer authorized thereto by the Mining Commissioner
under section 5(1)(a) of that Act;
(f) a labour inspector
appointed as such under section 3(1) of the Labour Act, 1992 (Act No.
6 of 1992);
(g) a fishery control
officer designated under section 5 of the Sea Fisheries Act, 1992 (Act
No. 29 of 1992);
(h) any staff member
authorized thereto by the Permanent Secretary in writing,
acting in the ordinary
performance of his or her duties, shall enter, reside, travel, work or
be without a permit contemplated in section 27(k): Provided that every
such permit shall specify the restricted area, or part thereof, for which
it is granted.
(2) A restricted
area shall be -
(a) any area in which
onshore diamond mining in terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining)
Act may be carried on: Provided that every area of land in respect of
which a licence under that Act has been issued shall be a separate restricted
area notwithstanding that more than one licence has been so issued to
the same person in respect of adjoining pieces of land;
(b) any area in which
onshore bulk sampling for diamonds in terms of an exclusive prospecting
licence or a mineral deposit retention licence in terms of the Minerals
(Prospecting and Mining) Act is being carried on;
(c) any diamond prospecting
or mining vessel registered in terms of section 57(1), unless the Minister
has on application declared in writing such vessel not to be a restricted
area;
(d) any installation,
equipment or attachment used in conjunction with a vessel referred to
in paragraph (c) and used for mining of or prospecting for diamonds offshore,
unless the Minister has on application declared in writing such installation,
equipment or attachment not to be a restricted area;
(e) any place where
processing of diamondiferous concentrate, or processing of gravel with
the intention of recovering diamonds, takes place;
(f) any area declared
to be restricted by the Minister by notice in the Gazette.
(3) Any restricted
area shall be clearly indicated by the display of adequate signs to be
a restricted area.
(4) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding two years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Possession of
diamondiferous concentrate
53. (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, no person shall have
in his or her possession any diamondiferous concentrate outside any restricted
area unless such person is -
(a) a producer, contractor,
sub-contractor or holder of an exclusive prospecting licence who is transporting
such diamondiferous concentrate in accordance with his or her security
plan referred to in section 50;
(b) in respect of
such diamondiferous concentrate the holder of a permit referred to in
section 27(g); or
(c) in possession
of such diamondiferous concentrate while acting in the course and scope
of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which any person referred
to in paragraph (a) or (b) is a party, proof of which shall be on such
first-mentioned person. (2) Any person who contravenes a provision of
subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable
to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not
exceeding twenty years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Export of diamondiferous
concentrate
54. (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, no person shall export
any diamondiferous concentrate from Namibia without a permit contemplated
in section 27(h) unless such person is acting in the course and scope
of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which the holder of such
permit is a party, proof of which shall be on the person so acting.
(2) All unpolished
diamonds won or recovered from diamondiferous concentrate exported from
Namibia in accordance with the provisions of subsection (1) shall be returned
to Namibia within such period as is specified in the permit referred to
in that subsection, accompanied by such documents as may be specified
in such permit.
(3) Any person who
contravenes or fails to comply with a provision of this section shall
be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding
N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years
or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Removal of sand,
soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral from restricted areas
55. (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, no person shall remove
any sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral from a restricted
area unless such person is -
(a) a producer, contractor,
sub-contractor or holder of an exclusive prospecting licence who is removing
such sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral in accordance with
his or her security plan referred to in section 50;
(b) in respect of
such sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral the holder of a
permit referred to in section 27(i); or
(c) removing such
sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral while acting in the course
and scope of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which any person
referred to in paragraph (a) or (b) is a party, proof of which shall be
on such first-mentioned person.
(2) Any person who
contravenes a provision of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to
imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine
and such imprisonment.
Export of sand,
soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral reasonably believed may contain
diamonds
56. (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, no person shall export
from Namibia any sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral which
such person has reason to believe may contain unpolished diamonds without
a permit contemplated in section 27(j) unless such person is acting in
the course and scope of or in the execution of a lawful agreement to which
the holder of such permit is a party, proof of which shall be on the person
so acting.
(2) All unpolished
diamonds won or recovered from sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or
mineral exported from Namibia in accordance with the provisions of subsection
(1) shall be returned to Namibia within such period as is specified in
the permit referred to in that subsection, accompanied by such documents
as may be specified in such permit.
(3) Any person who
contravenes or fails to comply with a provision of this section shall
be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding
N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years
or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
PART
VII
DIAMOND PROSPECTING OR MINING VESSELS
Registration of
diamond prospecting or mining vessels
57. (1) Every
producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence, contractor and sub-contractor
engaged in offshore prospecting or mining shall in the prescribed manner
register any vessel in use or to be used by him or her as a diamond prospecting
or mining vessel.
(2) The Minister
may determine conditions -
(a) in relation to
the display of the registration number allocated in respect of any diamond
prospecting or mining vessel;
(b) in relation to
the use by any diamond prospecting or mining vessel of the landing, handling
or any other facilities in a particular harbour;
(c) specifying the
type of surveillance system, equipment, gear, apparatus or installation
which shall or may be on board of any diamond prospecting or mining vessel;
(d) regulating the
transfer of any person or thing to or from any diamond prospecting or
mining vessel;
(e) in relation to
the inspection of any diamond prospecting or mining vessel, whether at
sea or in a harbour;
(f) providing for,
with due regard to security and the costs involved, the placement on board
the diamond prospecting or mining vessel of diamond inspectors or other
staff members or other persons designated by the Minister, to observe
diamond prospecting or mining operations;
(g) regarding the
terms of engagement by any diamond prospecting or mining vessel with any
other vessel or aircraft;
(h) in relation to
the reporting of -
(i) the entry into
or departure from the Namibian waters of any diamond prospecting or mining
vessel;
(ii) the position
of any diamond prospecting or mining vessel; or
(iii) the commencement
and termination of diamond prospecting or mining operations by any diamond
prospecting or mining vessel; or
(i) in relation to
the reporting of any particulars of diamonds won or recovered by means
of such diamond prospecting or mining vessel.
(3) The Minister
may at any time cancel or vary any condition determined under subsection
(2) or determine any further reasonable condition.
(4) Any person referred
to in subsection (1) who has registered a diamond prospecting or mining
vessel in terms of that subsection shall, within 21 days after -
(a) any alteration
to the diamond prospecting or mining vessel in question, including a change
in the name thereof, which renders the description thereof incorrect or
inapplicable; or
(b) such person has
sold the diamond prospecting or mining vessel in question or ceased to
use it as a diamond prospecting or mining vessel,
furnish the Commissioner
with particulars of any such event in writing.
(5) Any person who
uses as a diamond prospecting or mining vessel any vessel which is not
registered in terms of subsection (1) shall be guilty of an offence and
on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both such fine and such
imprisonment.
(6) Any person who
fails to comply with any condition determined by the Minister under subsection
(2) or (3) shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to
a fine not exceeding N$250 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
five years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
(7) Any person who
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (4) shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
PART
VIII
SPECIAL POWERS OF MINISTER RELATING TO DIAMOND INDUSTRY, INFORMATION AND
ENQUIRIES
Securing regular
supply of unpolished diamonds for diamond processing
58. (1) In
order that a regular supply of unpolished diamonds of such quantities,
classes, qualities and descriptions as may be required by any cutter,
tool-maker or researcher may be secured by the cutter, tool-maker or researcher
concerned, the Minister may, subject to the provisions of subsection (2),
from time to time by written notice to any producer require the producer
to make available for sale to that cutter, tool-maker or researcher, during
a period specified in that notice, such quantities, classes, qualities
and descriptions of unpolished diamonds as the Minister may by that notice
reasonably fix and determine.
(2) No notice shall
be given by the Minister to any producer under subsection (1) unless the
cutter, tool-maker or researcher concerned has been unable by agreement
with any producer or dealer to acquire, on reasonable terms and conditions
of sale, a regular supply of unpolished diamonds of such quantities, classes,
qualities and descriptions as will enable that cutter, tool-maker or researcher
to carry on without interruption the diamond cutting, tool-making operations
or research and tests authorized by his or her licence.
(3) The Minister
shall in the notice given under subsection (1) also fix and determine
terms and conditions of sale in accordance with the provisions of subsections
(5) and (6), and the purchase price shall be paid against delivery of
the unpolished diamonds.
(4) The producer
concerned shall on the written demand of the cutter, tool-maker or researcher
concerned sell to him or her unpolished diamonds in accordance with the
terms and conditions of sale fixed and determined by the Minister by the
notice given under subsection (1).
(5) The terms and
conditions of sale reasonably fixed and determined by the Minister by
the notice given under subsection (1) shall prescribe that the prices
to be paid by the cutter, tool-maker or researcher concerned to the producer
concerned for the unpolished diamonds to be supplied in terms of that
notice shall be in accordance with the current market price of the unpolished
diamonds arrived at on the basis of the prices obtained by that producer.
(6) The terms and
conditions of sale reasonably fixed and determined by the Minister by
the notice given under subsection (1) shall also include provisions as
to -
(a) the proof to
be adduced as to the prices obtained by the producer concerned and the
manner in which the prices of the unpolished diamonds to be sold to the
cutter, tool-maker or researcher concerned were determined;
(b) the manner in
which all questions and disputes which may arise between that cutter,
tool-maker or researcher and that producer in regard to such sale shall
be finally settled; and
(c) fair and equitable
arrangements between that cutter, tool-maker and researcher and that producer
in respect of any matter arising under this Act in regard to such sale.
(7) Any producer
who fails to comply with a provision of subsection (4) shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
Measuring of international
market prices of unpolished diamonds
59. (1) If
the Minister is satisfied that it is necessary in order to measure international
market prices for unpolished diamonds, he or she may, subject to the provisions
of subsection (2), from time to time by written notice to any producer,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or dealer engaged in the sale
of unpolished diamonds require such producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence or dealer to sell during a period specified in that notice, but
no exceeding six months in any calendar year, by such means and on such
terms and conditions customary in the diamond trade, such quantities,
classes, qualities and descriptions of unpolished diamonds as the Minister
may by that notice reasonably specify.
(2) No notice shall
be given by the Minister under subsection (1) unless he or she is satisfied
that the net proceeds received by the producer, holder of an exclusive
prospecting licence or dealer concerned from the sale of unpolished diamonds
specified in that notice -
(a) will not be less
than the net proceeds that, but for that notice, would have been received
by that producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or dealer
from the sale of unpolished diamonds so specified; and
(b) will not exceed,
during any calendar year, 10 per cent of the net proceeds received by
that producer, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or dealer from
the sale of all unpolished diamonds sold by that producer, holder of an
exclusive prospecting licence or dealer during that year.
(3) Any producer,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or dealer to whom a notice
under subsection (1) is directed, shall sell the unpolished diamonds specified
in that notice in accordance with the terms of that notice.
(4) Any producer,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or dealer who fails to comply
with a provision of subsection (3) shall be guilty of an offence and on
conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding two years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Furnishing Minister
with information
60. (1) The
Minister may in writing direct any person -
(a) to furnish the
Minister periodically or otherwise and before the dates or within the
period specified in the direction with such information as the Minister
may consider necessary to effectively perform his or her functions under
this Act and as may be available to any such person;
(b) to submit to
the Minister within the period specified in the direction any register,
book or document in the possession or custody or under the control of
any such person which contains or is believed to contain any such information.
(2) The Minister
may require that information requested under subsection (1)(a) be furnished
in the form of a sworn statement.
(3) The Minister
may examine a register, book or document submitted to him or her in terms
of subsection (1)(b) or make an extract therefrom or a copy thereof.
(4) Any person who
fails to comply with a direction under subsection (1) shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
Enquiries by Minister
61. (1) The
Minister may enquire into any matter to which this Act relates.
(2) For the purposes
of an enquiry under subsection (1), the Minister may -
(a) by written notice
summon any person who in the opinion of the Minister may be able to give
information of material importance concerning the subject matter of the
enquiry, or who the Minister suspects or believes has in his or her possession
or custody or under his or her control any register, book, document or
thing which may have a bearing on the subject matter of the enquiry, to
appear before the Minister at the time and place specified in that notice,
to be examined or to produce such register, book, document or thing;
(b) call upon, and
administer an oath to or accept an affirmation from, any person present
at the enquiry who was summoned under paragraph (a);
(c) examine any person
who was called upon under paragraph (b) or require such person to produce
any register, book, document or thing referred to in paragraph (a).
(3) A notice contemplated
in subsection (2)(a) shall be served in the prescribed manner.
(4) The law relating
to privilege, as applicable to a witness subpoenaed to give evidence or
to produce a book, document or thing before a court of law, shall mutatis
mutandis apply in respect of the examination of, or the production of
a register, book, document or thing to the Minister by, any person referred
to in subsection (2)(c).
(5) Any person who
-
(a) having been duly
summoned under subsection (2)(a), without sufficient cause fails -
(i) to attend at
the time and place specified in the notice contemplated in that subsection;
or
(ii) to remain in
attendance until excused from further attendance by the Minister; or
(b) having been called
upon under subsection (2)(b), refuses to be sworn or to affirm as a witness;
or
(c) without sufficient
cause fails -
(i) to answer fully
and satisfactorily to the best of his or her knowledge all questions lawfully
put to him or her under subsection (2)(c); or
(ii) to produce any
register, book, document or thing in his or her possession or custody
or under his or her control which he or she has been required to produce
under subsection (2)(c),
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
PART
IX
FINANCIAL MATTERS
Duties payable
on unpolished diamonds
62. (1) Subject
to the provisions of subsections (4) and (5) of this section, any person
who is in terms of section 36(1) entitled to export unpolished diamonds
from Namibia and who wishes to so export any unpolished diamond shall,
before the release of that diamond by the Minister following valuation
thereof in terms of section 45, pay to the Commissioner, in accordance
with the provisions of subsection (2) of this section, a duty at a rate
of 10 per cent of the value of that diamond as determined by the Minister
in terms of the last-mentioned section.
(2) Whenever the
Minister has made a determination under section 63(1), the Commissioner
shall direct that payment of any duty payable in terms of subsection (1)
of this section be made to the Commissioner in two parts in such amounts
as specified by the Commissioner having regard to such determination:
Provided that -
(a) the part which
consists of a percentage of the duty payable in terms of subsection (1)
of this section and which has been determined under section 63(1), shall
be paid to the Commissioner for the benefit of the Diamond Valuation Fund
established by that section; and
(b) the other part
shall be paid to the Commissioner for the benefit of the State Revenue
Fund.
(3) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, any person -
(a) who is liable
to pay a duty in terms of subsection (1) in respect of any unpolished
diamond; or (b) in respect of whom -
(i) any such duty
was remitted or refunded; or
(ii) payment of any
such duty was deferred,
under subsection
(7),
shall be exempt from
liability to pay any royalty which he or she may be required to pay in
terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act in respect of that
diamond.
(4) No person shall
be liable to pay any duty in terms of subsection (1) in respect of any
unpolished diamond, if any such duty has already been paid in respect
of that diamond or if any royalty has already been paid in respect of
that diamond in terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and Mining) Act, proof
of any such payment being on the person claiming to be exempt from liability
in terms of this section.
(5) No person shall
be liable to pay any duty in terms of subsection (1) in respect of any
unpolished diamond not won or recovered in Namibia, proof of which shall
be on the person claiming to be exempt from liability in terms of this
section: Provided that the provisions of subsection (1) shall apply in
respect of the export of any unpolished diamond which was won or recovered
outside Namibia from diamondiferous concentrate, sand, soil, clay, gravel,
stone, rock or mineral previously exported from Namibia and which was
returned to Namibia in terms of section 54(2) or 56(2), as the case may
be.
(6) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, no person who sells
or otherwise disposes of any unpolished diamond to a licensee shall be
required to pay any royalty in terms of the Minerals (Prospecting and
Mining) Act in respect of that diamond.
(7) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary contained in the State Finance Act, 1991 (Act
No. 31 of 1991), the Minister in consultation with the Minister of Finance
may, on application made to him or her in writing by any person referred
to in subsection (1) -
(a) by notice in
writing to such person -
(i) remit, either
wholly or partly, any duty payable in terms of subsection (1); or
(ii) defer payment
of any such duty; or
(b) refund, either
wholly or partly, any duty paid in terms of subsection (1),
on such conditions
as may be determined by the Minister and specified in that notice, or
the Minister may refuse to so remit or refund such duty or to so defer
such payment.
(8) The Minister
shall, not later than 30 June in each year, lay upon the Table of the
National Assembly a report showing -
(a) the full names
of all persons in respect of whom duties were remitted or refunded or
payments of duties were deferred under subsection (7) during the financial
year which ended in that year; and
(b) the amounts remitted,
refunded or deferred and the reasons for such remission, refund or deferment.
Diamond Valuation
Fund
63. (1) There
is hereby established a fund to be known as the Diamond Valuation Fund,
which shall consist of such percentage of the duties paid to the Commissioner
in terms of section 62(1) as the Minister may, after consultation with
the Minister of Finance, determine to be necessary for the purposes referred
to in subsection (2).
(2) The moneys available
in the Diamond Valuation Fund shall be utilized to defray the cost of
valuation of any unpolished diamond pursuant to the provisions of this
Act and to defray the expenses incurred in administering the said Fund.
(3) The Permanent
Secretary shall -
(a) be responsible
for the administration of the Diamond Valuation Fund; and
(b) be the accounting
officer of the said Fund, and as such be charged with the responsibility
of accounting for all moneys accruing to and payments made out of the
said Fund.
(4) The financial
year of the Diamond Valuation Fund shall end on 31 December of each year.
(5) The Permanent
Secretary shall open one or more accounts in the name of the Diamond Valuation
Fund with a financial institution, and shall deposit into that account
or those accounts all moneys accruing to the said Fund in terms of this
Part.
(6) The Permanent
Secretary shall keep proper accounts and records of all moneys accrued
to and payments made out of the Diamond Valuation Fund.
(7) Subject to the
provisions of subsections (8) and (9), the Permanent Secretary shall as
soon as possible, but not later than three months after the end of each
financial year, prepare, or cause to be prepared, and submit to the Minister
annual financial statements in respect of the financial year in question,
together with a report by the Auditor-General or, if appointed by the
Auditor-General, the auditor so appointed, relating to such statements.
(8) The annual financial
statements referred to in subsection (7) shall contain -
(a) detailed particulars
of all moneys accrued to and expenditure incurred by the Diamond Valuation
Fund during the financial year in question; and
(b) such additional
particulars as the Minister may determine.
(9) The accounts
and records and the annual financial statements referred to in subsections
(6) and (7), respectively, shall be examined and audited by the Auditor-General
or by an auditor appointed for that purpose by the Auditor-General at
the expense of the Diamond Valuation Fund.
(10) The Permanent
Secretary shall, not later than three months before the commencement of
each financial year, submit to the Minister a copy of the annual budget
reflecting the estimated expenditure of the Diamond Valuation Fund for
the next ensuing financial year: Provided that the Permanent Secretary
may at any time during any financial year submit to the Minister an additional
budget reflecting any additional expenditure of the said Fund for that
financial year.
(11) The Minister
shall lay upon the Table of the National Assembly all the statements and
the audit report received by him or her in terms of subsection (7), within
30 days from the date of receipt thereof, if the National Assembly is
then in ordinary session, or, if the National Assembly is not then in
ordinary session, within 14 days after the commencement of its next ensuing
ordinary session.
(12) Any unexpended
balance in the Diamond Valuation Fund at the close of each financial year
-
(a) not exceeding
an amount equal to the amount required for the estimated expenditure of
the said Fund for its next ensuing financial year, shall be carried forward
to the next ensuing financial year as a credit to the said Fund;
(b) exceeding an
amount equal to the amount required for the estimated expenditure of the
said Fund for its next ensuing financial year, shall -
(i) to the extent
that such balance does not exceed such amount, be carried forward as contemplated
in paragraph (a);
(ii) to the extent
that such balance exceeds such amount, be deposited into the State Revenue
Fund.
PART
X
POLISHED DIAMONDS
Export of polished
diamonds
64. (1) Any
person who intends to export from Namibia any polished diamonds of a prescribed
weight shall notify the Minister thereof in the prescribed manner at least
14 days before such intended export.
(2) The Minister
may, within the period of 14 days referred to in subsection (1), examine
the polished diamonds which are intended for export in order to determine
whether those diamonds are in fact polished diamonds.
(3) For the purpose
of exercising the power conferred by subsection (2), the Minister may
direct the person who intends to export the polished diamonds in question
to submit those diamonds to him or her for examination.
(4) (a) If the Minister
is satisfied that the diamonds examined by him or her under subsection
(2) are polished diamonds, those diamonds shall, before being released
for export, be made up in a parcel and sealed in such manner as the Minister
may prescribe or otherwise determine.
(b) The polished
diamonds so sealed shall not be exported otherwise than in that sealed
parcel.
(5) If the Minister
fails to examine the polished diamonds which are intended for export within
the period of 14 days referred to in subsection (1), those diamonds may
thereafter be exported without having been so examined or having been
sealed in terms of subsection (4)(a).
(6) Any person who
-
(a) contravenes or
fails to comply with a provision of subsection (1) or (4)(b); or
(b) fails to comply
with a direction under subsection (3),
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$1 000
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding twenty years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
PART
XI
SEARCH, SEIZURE AND ARREST AND OTHER MISCELLANEOUS POWERS
Designation of
diamond inspectors
65. (1) The
Minister may, on the recommendation of the Public Service Commission and
subject to the laws governing the Public Service, designate posts in the
Ministry of which the incumbents shall be diamond inspectors.
(2) The Minister
in consultation with the Minister of Fisheries and Marine Resources may,
on the recommendation of the Public Service Commission and subject to
the laws governing the Public Service, designate by notice in the Gazette
posts in the Ministry of Fisheries and Marine Resources of which the incumbents
shall be diamond inspectors: Provided that the diamond inspectors so designated
shall exercise the powers conferred upon diamond inspectors by section
66 only in the restricted areas referred to in section 52(2)(c) and (d).
(3) The Minister
may at any time withdraw or, in consultation with the Minister of Fisheries
and Marine Resources, alter a designation made under subsection (2).
(4) Every diamond
inspector designated under subsection (1) or (2) shall be furnished with
an identity card stating that the person concerned has been designated
as a diamond inspector under this Act.
(5) Whenever a diamond
inspector exercises a power or performs a duty or function in terms of
this Act, he or she shall, at the request of any person affected thereby,
produce his or her identity card to such person for inspection.
Powers and duties
of diamond inspectors and police officials
66. (1) In
addition to any other powers conferred or duties imposed upon a diamond
inspector or police official by or under any other law, the diamond inspector
or police official may, subject to the provisions of subsections (3),
(6) and (7) -
(a) board any diamond
prospecting or mining vessel or installation, or enter any premises or
other property or place or any vehicle, aircraft or other vessel, on which
any activity in connection with unpolished diamonds is carried on and
perform on any such diamond prospecting or mining vessel or installation
or on any such premises, property, vehicle, aircraft or other vessel or
at any such place such acts as may be necessary to ascertain whether the
provisions of this Act have been or are being complied with;
(b) if he or she
has reasonable grounds to suspect that an offence under this Act has been
or is about to be committed in respect of any unpolished diamond, or has
been or is about to be committed in respect of or by means of any machinery,
and that such diamond or machinery is upon any diamond prospecting or
mining vessel or installation or upon any premises, property, vehicle,
aircraft or other vessel or at any place at any time board or enter and
search any such diamond prospecting or mining vessel or installation or
any such premises, property, vehicle, aircraft or other vessel or any
such place, and search or cause to be searched any person thereupon or
therein;
(c) if he or she
has reasonable grounds to suspect that any machinery is used or intended
for use in connection with the unlawful polishing of diamonds, examine,
test or take photographs of such machinery; (d) question any person who
in his or her opinion may be capable of furnishing any information on
any matter to which this Act relates, and for that purpose require any
diamond prospecting or mining vessel or other vessel or any vehicle or
aircraft to be stopped;
(e) if he or she
has reasonable grounds to suspect that any person has committed an offence
under this Act, search or cause to be searched any such person or any
article in his or her possession or custody or under his or her control,
including any clothing worn by such person, and arrest such person; (f)
require from any person who has in his or her possession or custody or
under his or her control any register or document under this Act, to produce
to him or her forthwith, or at such time and place as may be determined
by him or her, any such register or document;
(g) if he or she
has reasonable grounds to suspect that any parcel which is being or has
been dispatched through the post or by means of a courier service contains
any unpolished diamond, notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any
other law contained, stop or cause to be stopped either during transit
or otherwise any such parcel, and open and examine such parcel in the
presence of the person by whom it was dispatched, or any other suitable
person;
(h) seize any diamond,
machinery, register, document or thing which appears to provide proof
of a contravention of a provision of this Act.
(2) A diamond inspector
shall in the exercise of his or her powers conferred by subsection (1)
be deemed to be a peace officer, as defined in section 1 of the Criminal
Procedure Act.
(3) A search of any
person or dwelling under subsection (1) shall not be carried out without
a search warrant unless -
(a) the person concerned
or the owner or occupier of the dwelling, as the case may be, has consented
to the search; or
(b) the diamond inspector
or police official on reasonable grounds believes -
(i) that a search
warrant will be issued if applied for; and
(ii) that the delay
in obtaining such warrant would defeat the object of the search.
(4) The provisions
of sections 21 and 29 of the Criminal Procedure Act shall mutatis mutandis
apply in relation to the obtaining and execution of a search warrant referred
to in subsection (3), and to the execution of any search under this section,
and for the purposes of such application a reference in the said sections
to a police official shall be construed as including a reference to a
diamond inspector.
(5) The provisions
of section 39 of the Criminal Procedure Act shall mutatis mutandis apply
in relation to the execution of any arrest under this section.
(6) A diamond inspector
who receives information of an offence or suspected offence under this
Act which has been or is about to be committed, or who arrests any person
or seizes any diamond, machinery, register, document or other thing under
subsection (1), shall without delay inform that unit of the Namibian Police
Force charged with the protection of diamonds accordingly and communicate
such information, or deliver such person, diamond, machinery, register,
document or other thing, to the said unit of the Namibian Police Force.
(7) A diamond inspector may exercise the powers conferred by subsection
(1) only -
(a) in a restricted
area;
(b) on the business
premises of any licensee;
(c) on premises approved
under section 39 or 41; or
(d) on any other
premises where any unpolished diamond or diamondiferous concentrate, or
any sand, soil, clay, gravel, stone, rock or mineral which has been removed
from a restricted area or which is reasonably believed may contain unpolished
diamonds, is held or is reasonably suspected to be held by any producer,
contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence
or a non-exclusive prospecting licence, licensee, or holder of a permit
referred to in section 27(a), (b), (c), (d), (e), (f), (g), (h), (i) or
(j):
Provided that a diamond
inspector may exercise such powers in an area or on a premises other than
an area or a premises referred to in paragraph (a), (b), ( c) or (d) of
this subsection, if -
(i) he or she reasonably
believes that any person -
(aa) has committed
an offence under this Act; and
(bb) is fleeing or
escaping from an area or a premises referred to in paragraph (a), (b),
(c) or (d) of this subsection; and
(ii) he or she follows
such person from an area or a premises referred to in paragraph (a), (b),
(c) or (d) of this subsection to such other area or premises,
as the case may be.
(8) Notwithstanding
the provisions of subsection (7), the powers conferred by subsection (1)
may, in respect of any diamond prospecting or mining vessel registered
in terms of section 57(1) or any other vessel used as a diamond prospecting
or mining vessel in the Namibian waters and in respect of any person or
any unpolished diamonds thereon, be exercised also outside the Namibian
waters.
(9) To the extent
that the provisions of this section provide for a limitation of the fundamental
right to privacy contemplated in Article 13 of the Namibian Constitution,
in that they authorize interference with the privacy of a person's home,
correspondence or communications, such limitation is enacted on authority
of the said Article 13.
Search of persons
and things
67. (1) Subject
to the provisions of subsection (2), any producer, contractor, sub-contractor,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee, or his or her
authorized representative, may search or cause to be searched -
(a) any person, whether
employed in connection with the activities of such producer, contractor,
sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee
or not, on any land, premises, vessel or installation upon which or in
any building in which such activities are being carried on; and
(b) any vehicle,
vessel or aircraft, or any other object in the possession of or any clothing
worn by such person, or any vehicle, vessel or aircraft on or in which
such person is or was, and may without warrant -
(i) seize any article
referred to in section 20 of the Criminal Procedure Act; and
(ii) subject to the
provisions of Article 11(2) and (3) of the Namibian Constitution, arrest
any person in regard to whom such producer, contractor, sub-contractor,
holder of an exclusive prospecting licence or licensee, or his or her
authorized representative, has a reasonable suspicion that such person
has committed an offence under this Act.
(2) A search under
subsection (1) shall not be carried out unless -
(a) the person concerned
has consented to the search;
(b) in the case of
a search of a vehicle, vessel or aircraft, the person in charge of the
vehicle, vessel or aircraft at the scene has consented to the search;
or
(c) such producer,
contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive prospecting licence
or licensee, or his or her authorized representative, on reasonable grounds
believes -
(i) that a search
warrant will be issued if applied for by a police official; and
(ii) that the delay
in obtaining such warrant would defeat the object of the search.
(3) Notwithstanding
the provisions of section 28(5), it shall be a condition of every permit
contemplated in section 27(k) that the holder thereof consents to being
searched in a lawful manner upon leaving or immediately after having left
the restricted area or upon leaving or immediately after having left such
places within the restricted area as the permit may specify.
(4) A search under
this section may include -
(a) the dismantling
or taking apart of any vehicle, vessel, aircraft, object or clothing if
no other reasonable means of adequately searching such vehicle, vessel,
aircraft, object or clothing exists;
(b) an examination
by means of an X-ray or any other apparatus in the manner regulated by
law.
(5) Whenever any
person has been arrested or any article has been seized under subsection
(1), that unit of the Namibian Police Force charged with the protection
of diamonds shall without delay be informed accordingly, and the person
so arrested or the article so seized shall be delivered to the said unit
of the Namibian Police Force.
(6) To the extent
that the provisions of this section authorize the interference with a
person's fundamental right to privacy or the deprivation of the personal
liberty of such person by conducting a search or making an arrest under
those provisions, as the case may be, such interference or deprivation
shall be authorized only -
(a) in the case of
such interference, on the grounds of the prevention of crime and the protection
of the rights of others as contemplated in Article 13(1) of the Namibian
Constitution; or
(b) in the case of
such deprivation, on the grounds of the procedures established under this
section pursuant to the provisions of Article 7 of the said Constitution.
(7) Any person who
resists any search or arrest under this section, or who wilfully hinders
or obstructs any other person exercising his or her powers under this
section, shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to
a fine not exceeding N$100 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
two years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Malicious arrest,
seizure and search
68. (1) Any
person who, purporting to act under this Act, wrongfully and maliciously
or without reasonable grounds arrests, or seizes the property of or under
the control of, any other person or effects any search, shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$10
000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both
such fine and such imprisonment.
(2) Nothing in this
section contained shall be construed as taking away or diminishing any
civil right or liability in respect of a wrongful or malicious arrest,
seizure or search.
PART
XII
MISCELLANEOUS PROVISIONS
Regulations
69. (1) The
Minister may make regulations as to -
(a) the manner in
which meetings of any committee of the Board shall be convened, the procedure
and quorum at those meetings and the manner in which minutes of those
meetings shall be kept;
(b) the purchase,
sale and possession of unpolished diamonds by the Board, and the safe-keeping
of those diamonds;
(c) the prevention
of illegal acts relating to diamonds;
(d) the registration
of persons in the service, or involved in the activities, of a licensee
and the keeping of a register of persons so registered;
(e) control over
and the searching of persons referred to in paragraph (d);
(f) the imposition
of a restriction on or prohibition of any particular interest in the activities
carried on by a producer, contractor, sub-contractor, holder of an exclusive
prospecting licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence, or licensee;
(g) the cancellation
of any registration under this Act or of any permit, certificate or other
authority issued or obtained in terms of this Act;
(h) the payment of
witness fees to persons summoned to appear before the Minister;
(i) the manner in
which notices required to be given in terms of this Act shall be given
and served;
(j) any records,
information or registers which shall be kept for the purposes of this
Act; (k) any matter required or permitted to be prescribed; and
(l) in general, any
matter which the Minister may consider necessary or expedient to prescribe
or regulate in order that the objects of this Act may be achieved, and
the generality of this paragraph shall not be limited by the preceding
paragraphs.
(2) A regulation
made under subsection (1) may prescribe a penalty, not exceeding a fine
of N$100 000 or imprisonment for a period of two years or not exceeding
both such fine and such imprisonment, for any contravention of or failure
to comply with any provision thereof.
Application of
Act, and jurisdiction of courts in respect of offences under this Act
70. (1) This
Act, and any amendment thereof, shall apply also in the territorial sea,
the exclusive economic zone of Namibia referred to in section 4 of the
Territorial Sea and Exclusive Economic Zone of Namibia Act, 1990 (Act
No. 3 of 1990), and the continental shelf of Namibia referred to in section
6 of that Act.
(2) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained -
(a) the High Court
of Namibia; or
(b) any magistrate's
court whose area of jurisdiction borders on or includes any part of the
sea in the vicinity where the offence has allegedly been committed, and
which would otherwise have jurisdiction,
shall be competent
to try any offence under this Act which is committed or alleged to have
been committed within the territorial sea, the exclusive economic zone
of Namibia referred to in section 4 of the Territorial Sea and Exclusive
Economic Zone of Namibia Act, 1990, or the continental shelf of Namibia
referred to in section 6 of that Act.
General offences
and penalties
71. Any person
who -
(a) resists or wilfully
hinders or obstructs any diamond inspector or police official in the performance
of his or her functions under this Act;
(b) without sufficient
cause refuses or fails to comply to the best of his or her ability with
any requirement or request made by any diamond inspector or police official
in the performance of his or her functions under this Act;
(c) without sufficient
cause refuses or fails to answer to the best of his or her ability any
question which any diamond inspector or police official in the performance
of his or her functions under this Act has put to him or her;
(d) wilfully furnishes
to any diamond inspector or police official information which is false
or misleading;
(e) except for the
purposes of performing his or her functions under this Act or when required
to do so by any court or under any law, discloses to any other person
any information acquired by him or her in the performance of his or her
functions under this Act;
(f) places any unpolished
diamond on the body or in the possession, or in or on the premises or
any other property or in or on the vessel, vehicle or aircraft, of any
other person with intent that such other person be charged with an offence
under this Act; (g) in or in connection with any application in terms
of this Act wilfully furnishes information or makes a statement which
is false or misleading;
(h) with intent to
defraud, alters, defaces, destroys or mutilates any register or document
under this Act; or
(i) falsely gives
himself or herself out -
(i) to be a producer,
contractor or sub-contractor, or the holder of an exclusive prospecting
licence or a non-exclusive prospecting licence, or the holder of any other
licence or any permit under this Act;
(ii) to be registered
as an authorized representative of any person; or
(iii) to be a diamond
inspector,
shall be guilty of
an offence and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$100 000
or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding two years or to both such
fine and such imprisonment.
Negligent loss
of unpolished diamonds
72. Any person
who by his or her gross negligence loses any unpolished diamond or causes
or contributes to the loss, theft or robbery of any unpolished diamond
or makes possible the actual loss, theft or robbery of any unpolished
diamond, shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to
a fine not exceeding N$100 000 or to imprisonment for a period not exceeding
two years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Falsely creating
impression that unpolished diamonds naturally occur in any place
73. (1) Any
person who, with intent to deceive, makes any false statement, either
expressly or impliedly, or performs any act or engages in any conduct
which is calculated to create the false impression that any unpolished
diamond naturally occurs or occurred in any place or was found in that
place or to create the false impression that unpolished diamonds naturally
occur or are to be found in that place, shall be guilty of an offence
and on conviction be liable to a fine not exceeding N$500 000 or to imprisonment
for a period not exceeding ten years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
(2) Where in any
prosecution for a contravention of subsection (1) the accused is proved
to have made a statement or performed any act or engaged in any conduct
which would be likely to lead any person to form or have the false impression
referred to in that subsection, or would tend to mislead any person, the
facts so proved shall be prima facie proof that the accused made such
statement or performed or engaged in such conduct with the intent referred
to in that subsection.
Theft of diamonds
74. Any person
who steals any diamond the property of or in the lawful possession of
another person, shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable
to a fine not exceeding N$1 000 000 or to imprisonment for a period not
exceeding twenty years or to both such fine and such imprisonment.
Attempt, conspiracy,
aiding and inducing another person to commit offence
75. (1) Any
person who attempts to commit any offence under this Act shall be guilty
of an offence and on conviction be liable to the penalties to which a
person convicted of actually committing that offence would be liable.
(2) Any person who -
(a) aids another
person in committing; or
(b) conspires with
any other person to aid or procure the commission of or to commit; or
(c) incites, instigates, commands or procures any other person to commit,
an offence under
this Act shall be guilty of an offence and on conviction be liable to
the penalties to which a person convicted of actually committing that
offence would be liable.
Documentary evidence
76. In any
criminal proceedings at which an accused is charged with an offence under
this Act, any document which purports to be a licence, permit, certificate
or other authority issued or obtained in terms of this Act, or a copy
of such licence, permit, certificate or authority certified as a true
copy by a person who purports to be the Commissioner, shall on its mere
production at such proceedings be admissible in evidence and be prima
facie proof of the particulars contained therein.
Forfeiture
77. (1) Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, any money or property
which a person has paid or delivered to a member or an agent of the Namibian
Police Force in pursuance of an agreement for the delivery or acquisition
of unpolished diamonds, shall upon the conviction of such person of an
offence under this Act in connection with such an agreement be forfeited
to the State.
(2) (a) A forfeiture
in terms of subsection (1) shall not affect any right which any person
other than the convicted person may have to the property forfeited, if
he or she satisfies the court concerned -
(i) that he or she
did not know that such property was being used or would be used for the
purpose of or in connection with the commission of the offence in question;
or
(ii) that he or she
could not prevent such use.
(b) Paragraph (a)
shall not apply in respect of any money forfeited in terms of subsection
(1).
(3) The provisions
of section 35(4) of the Criminal Procedure Act shall mutatis mutandis
apply in respect of a right referred to in subsection (2) of this section,
and for the purposes of such application -
(a) a reference in
the said section 35(4) to the court shall be construed as a reference
to the court which has convicted the person referred to in subsection
(1) of this section; and
(b) a reference in
the said section 35(4) to a declaration of forfeiture shall be construed
as a forfeiture in terms of subsection (1) of this section.
Jurisdiction of
magistrates' courts in respect of punishments
78. Notwithstanding
anything to the contrary in any other law contained, a magistrate's court
shall have jurisdiction to impose any penalty provided for in this Act.
Delegation of
powers
79. (1) The
Minister may, subject to such conditions as he or she may determine, delegate
any power, excluding the power to make regulations under section 69 or
to publish notices in the Gazette under section 13(1), 52(2)(f) or 65(2),
conferred upon him or her by or under this Act to any staff member of
the Ministry or to any police official attached to that branch of the
Namibian Police Force charged with the protection of diamonds.
(2) Any staff member
or police official to whom a power has been delegated under subsection
(1) may, with the prior written approval of the Minister, delegate that
power to any other person to whom the Minister could have delegated that
power.
(3) The Permanent
Secretary may, subject to such conditions as he or she may determine,
delegate any power conferred upon him or her by or under this Act to a
staff member of the Ministry.
(4) A delegation
under subsections (1) and (3) shall not divest the Minister or the Permanent
Secretary, as the case may be, of the power so delegated.
Repeal of laws,
and savings
80. (1) Subject
to the provisions of this section, the laws mentioned in the Schedule
are hereby repealed to the extent indicated in the third column thereof.
(2) Subject to the
provisions of subsection (4), anything done by virtue of a provision repealed
by subsection (1) and which is permitted or required to be done in terms
of a provision of this Act, shall be deemed to have been done in terms
of the last-mentioned provision.
(3) Subject to the
other provisions of this Act, anything which is required to be done by
virtue of a provision of this Act and which was not previously required
to be done by virtue of a provision repealed by subsection (1), shall
be done within a period of 60 days after the commencement of this Act:
Provided that the Minister may, within the said period of 60 days, on
good cause shown by the person concerned extend such period in writing.
(4) Any licence or
permit deemed to have been issued in terms of a provision of this Act
and which is valid at the commencement of this Act, shall remain in force
for a period of 60 days after such commencement or until the expiry of
such licence or permit, whichever may occur first: Provided that the Minister
may, within the said period of 60 days, on good cause shown by the holder
of such licence or permit extend such period in writing.
(5) At the commencement
of this Act the assets, liabilities, rights and obligations of the Diamond
Board for Namibia referred to in section 3(1) of the Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation, 1939 (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939), shall vest
in the Board.
(6) Any reference
in any other law or any document to the Diamond Industry Protection Proclamation,
1939 (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939), or any amendment thereof, shall be
construed as a reference to this Act.
Short title and
commencement
81. This Act
shall be called the Diamond Act, 1999, and shall come into operation on
a date to be fixed by the Minister by notice in the Gazette.
SCHEDULE
(Section 80(1))
LAWS REPEALED
| Proclamation
No. 17 of 1939 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation, 1939 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. 25 of 1939 |
Diamond Industry
Protection (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939) Amendment Proclamation, 1939 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. 17 of 1941 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Amendment Proclamation, 1941 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. 37 of 1941 |
Diamond Industry
Protection (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939) Further Amendment Proclamation,
1941 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. 7 of 1950 |
Diamond Industry
Protection (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939) Amendment Proclamation, 1950 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
30 of 1955 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939) Amendment Ordinance,
1955 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
43 of 1957 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Amendment Ordinance 1957 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
13 of 1958 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Amendment Ordinance 1958 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
25 of 1958 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Further Amendment Ordinance 1958 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
31 of 1959 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Amendment Ordinance, 1959 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
12 of 1961 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Amendment Ordinance, 1961 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
16 of 1967 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Proclamation Amendment Ordinance, 1967 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Ordinance No.
4 of 1969 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Amendment Ordinance, 1969 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. R.88 of 1969 |
Diamond Industry
Protection (Proclamation No. 17 of 1939) Amendment Ordinance, 1969 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Act No. 3 of
1975 |
South west Africa
Diamond Industry Protection Amendment Act, 1975 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Act No. 15 of
1980 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Amendment Act, 1980 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Act no. 24 of
1982 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Amendment Act, 1982 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Proclamation
No. AG.7 of 1990 |
Diamond Industry
Protection Amendment Proclamation, 1990 |
The repeal of
the whole |
| Act No. 21 of
1995 |
Diamond Taxation
Proclamation Repeal Act, 1995 |
The repeal of
sections 2 and 3 |
|