Myanmar giant jade stone 'too big to move'

Myanmar giant jade stone 'too big to move'

YANGON - A 174-tonne piece of jade worth millions of dollars that was uncovered in Myanmar will have to stay where it is for now -- because its owners don't have equipment strong enough to move it.

Tint Soe, a lawmaker from the ruling National League for Democracy party, poses for a photo next to a giant jade stone at a mining site in Hpakant, Kachine State, on October 13, 2016

The 5.8 metre-long (19 feet) stone was discovered by miners in northern Kachin state last week, buried up to 60 metres deep inside a mountain.

"When the edge of the stone was scratched we could see the quality of the jade inside -- the quality is very good," said Tint Soe, 56, a local lawmaker.

While some have estimated the rock could be worth more than $170 million, Tint Soe said its value was probably closer to $5.4 million.

Jade is traditionally used for charms and bracelets, but Tint Soe said the company had not yet decided what this particular find would be used for -- and have no way of moving it anyway.

"Currently the jade stone cannot be moved as there is no machine that can do it here, and no road either," he said.

Myanmar is the source of nearly all of the world's finest jadeite, a beautiful green stone highly prized in neighbouring China where it is known as the "stone of heaven".

Companies linked to the former junta dominate the trade, which Global Witness valued at around $31 billion in 2014 alone -- equivalent to around half the country's GDP.

Mining of the stone can extract a high human cost, with fatal mine collapses common -- around 100 people died in a major landslide in November last year.

Most of the precious stone is smuggled across the border into China, where it is believed to bring luck and good health.

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