 A rare 1,174 carat diamond has been dug up in the land of Diamonds, Botswana. It's the second huge stone to be found in a month in the country and is thought to be the third largest diamond ever found. A Canadian mining firm, Locara and Earth, unearthed the massive stone measuring 77 by 55 by 33 millimeters. It is described as its cleavage with germ of variable quality with significant domain of high quality white germ material. Botswana's president, Mugwiti Masis says the country is attracting the best in diamonds. So Botswana is not only producing the best diamonds, it's attracting the best in diamonds. In order to deliver the best return for our people, for our roads, for our hospitals, for our schools, for our environment and for development, this is Botswana. And rest assured, in every natural resource that we lay our hands on, we want to move along and add value through the knowledge space and derive maximum returns. Because diamonds being finite, I pledge and I would desire for the sake of Botswana that even after diamonds are exhausted, the diamond story and the diamond capacity remains a Botswana product. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed's prosperity party won the most seats in Ethiopia's parliamentary election. The election board said on Saturday a victory that has shows him another term in office. Abiy's party won 410 of 436 parliamentary seats, election board deputy chairperson Wopshet Ayele told the news conference in the capital, Addis Ababa. Abiy held the June 21st vote as a country's first free and fair election after decades of repressive rule. However, an opposition boycott war, its ethnic violence and logistical challenges overshadowed the election in some areas, voting did not take place in three of Ethiopia's 10 regions.