Amid Elon Musk's constant denial, his father details 4-day visit to emerald mine with billionaire son
Elon Musk’s father Errol Musk has given a detailed account of the four-day trip with his billionaire son to the much-disputed emerald mine in South Africa. This comes after Elon Musk has repeatedly shut down rumours clarifying that there is no evidence that such place exists.
In an interview with The Sun UK, Errol Musk revealed that Elon Musk went on a four-day visit to his emerald mine in South Africa when he was just a teenager. According to him, they went to the mine in the Lake Tanganyika region “to pick up a cargo of emeralds and fly them back to their native South Africa”.
As per his statement: “I visited the mine once, Elon came with me. It was lousy. There was nothing to eat except stamp mielies [ground dried corn]. Elon never ate anything for four days in a row.
Back in January, Elon Musk had tweeted that he’d offer one million dogecoin, worth $93,000 at the time, to anyone who can prove that this emerald mine actually existed. In a previous The US Sun report, Errol Musk had revealed that he can prove the mine’s existence. He further added, “Elon knows it’s true. All the kids know about it. My daughter has three or four emerald pendants. Elon saw them (the emeralds) at our house. He knew I was selling them.”
In his tweet, he also clarified: “There is no objective evidence whatsoever that this mine ever existed. He told me that he owned a share in a mine in Zambia, and I believed him for a while, but nobody has ever seen the mine, nor are there any records of its existence.”
Also Read: 'He has been bankrupt for 25 years': Elon Musk opens up about his father and an unhappy childhood
Elon Musk’s mother, Maye Musk, also joined the conversation, saying that if Errol Musk had an emerald mine, they wouldn’t have to sleep in a one-bedroom apartment or on the floor. She also revealed that when she and her family moved to Toronto in 1989, they stayed in a one-bedroom apartment. On Twitter, she wrote: “When we moved to Toronto in 1989, we stayed in a one-bedroom apartment until I found a rent-controlled apartment, which took us three weeks to clean up. We all worked, were happy and optimistic. The first I heard of an emerald mine was on Twitter about 10 years ago.”
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