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Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Allegations
of killings, thefts in Zimbabwe diamond mining
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
May 26, 2009
http://www.cbc.ca/world/story/2009/05/26/zimbabwe-diamonds.html
Under military
control since late last year, the Marange diamond fields in Chiadzwa
— potentially one of the richest diamond deposits in Africa
— were seized by the government from a private mining company
called African Consolidated Resources in 2006. It is an alluvial
field, meaning many of the stones just sit on the ground, ready
to be scooped.
Tens of thousands of
people — doctors, teachers, lawyers — impoverished by
President Robert Mugabe's decades-long regime, had descended on
the area, which lies near the border with Mozambique.
The fields are
off limits to the media, but a CBC crew recently got in by joining
the convoy of a local MP. They toured through the heavily guarded
villages that surround the fields to meet with people who said they
witnessed the killings, and their aftermath, first-hand last year.
Lovemore, a former telecom
worker-turned diamond panner, said he saw soldiers shoot some of
his fellow panners. "Yes, some were killed because of this
diamond," he told the CBC's Adrienne Arsenault.
A cemetery worker near
Chiadzwa showed Arsenault a mass grave that he said contained the
bodies of 68 people who were allegedly slaughtered in that campaign.
He produced dozens of burial orders filled in December — names
unknown.
A local mortician also
said he saw those bodies. "They were found in the field, beaten
by soldiers, beaten by police," he said, adding he also observed
gunshot wounds.
The Zimbabwe government
vehemently denied the allegations.
"Only three people
died as a result of infighting among the diamond panners, and the
culprits have been arrested and they are actually going through
our court of law now," said Obert Mpofu, the country's minister
of mines.
He dismissed the idea
of a mass grave. "It is totally fantasy. It is totally false.
I don't know what people want to achieve by doing this."
The government also denied
that military and other officials were benefiting directly from
illegal panning in the fields.
"We are
on top of the situation, and there is not even a single illegal
diamond activity now because of the measures we are taking,"
Mpofu said. However, a former military officer, who used to work
in Chiadzwa, and was able to produce some industrial and gem-quality
diamonds fresh from the fields with just a few hours notice, refuted
that assertion.
"That's a lie. . . .
It's only those with connections who are now able to dig and profit,"
he said. "It is the soldiers and police who are manning the
area who allow you to go and dig, and when you dig, you show them
what you have.
Sometimes they take the diamonds and go sell them for their own
profit."
His story was consistent
with what other panners told the CBC.
The former officer also
said that at night he had seen soldiers digging and then handing
over their finds to powerful people.
"They come during
the night, take the diamonds, and share them with senior government
officials," he said.
Diamond
profits unshared
The government is vague
when queried about how much is mined and where the money goes. Some
people, like the local MP, believe diamond profits could help to
solve many of the nation's problems — if only they could be
shared.
After uncontrolled
inflation, Zimbabwe's once thriving economy has collapsed. About
one-quarter of its population has fled, with most of those who remain
depending on food handouts. Poverty and AIDS have taken a toll,
slashing life expectancy to 37 years for men and just 34 years for
women.
The MP is trying to set up a trust for villagers to receive some
of the mining proceeds and is also pushing for immediate short-term
relief — to help build a proper medical clinic for example.
The existing clinic,
which serves 8,000 people, is little more than a ramshackle two-room
shed with a caved-in roof, few medications and two exhausted nurses.
And yet it is stands
on land that may be rich enough to offer hope of a cure for much
of what ails Zimbabwe.
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