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This article participates on the following special index pages:
Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
About
the Centre for Research and Development
Centre
for Research and Development
February 27, 2010
Why
we research
The Center for Research
and Development(CRD) is the leading voice investigating and exposing
high level corruption by government officials and gross human rights
violations by state security agents in Chiadzwa diamond fields.
We are of the opinion that Zimbabwe's resources are the panacea
to the country's economic problems. Foreign aid and borrowing
can be radically reduced and eventually eliminated if the Zimbabwean
leaders and the population unite to promote good governance of the
country's vast natural resources. Sadly there is dearth of
information regarding Zimbabwe's natural resource extraction,
save for political rhetoric touted by the country's political
elites who, despite parcelling the country among themselves and
their foreign allies, continue to emphasise that 'Zimbabwe
is for Zimbabweans'. The chorus to demand accountability and
transparency regarding the country's natural resources ought
to grow louder by the day. This onerous task is too big to be left
in the hands of a few civic organisations as doing so belittles
the role natural resources play in a country's well-being.
It is immoral and obscene for a few individuals, howbeit well connected
and powerful, to swim in an ocean of affluence whilst the population
is marooned on the no-man's-land between starvation and malnutrition.
Like in any struggle,
it is important for the oppressed to know their oppressors, understand
the methods used to oppress them and design responses to the problem.
Research becomes pivotal in gathering information regarding the
location of natural resources in the country, identify the current
exploiters and work collectively towards correcting the situation.
The CRD is thus committed to get into the jungles of Zimbabwe to
unearth crucial information upon which a credible campaign demanding
good governance of Zimbabwe's natural resources will be built.
Our research is authentic and reliable, without fear or favour.
What
we research on
Our research
is primarily on natural resource exploitation, ranging from land
use to mineral extraction. Although of late we have mainly focussed
on the diamond industry, our scope far exceeds the diamond fields
to encompass other natural resources within the length and breadth
of Zimbabwe. Below are some of the issues currently being researched
on by the CRD
(i) Expropriation
of Zimbabwe's resources
The stagnation,
or should we say decline, of Zimbabwe's economy does not reflect
the massive extraction of the country's natural resources
which are being shared between political elites and foreign nationals.
In many cases mining licenses were issued irregularly after some
senior government officials had received kickbacks from foreign
companies. In such cases foreign companies pay rent to particular
individuals at the expense of local communities and central government.
The irregular issuance of mining licenses to Mbada diamonds and
Canadile mining and the improper appointment of the board members
of these companies by the Ministry of Mines is the summary measure
of the degree to which corruption has reached stinking levels in
Zimbabwe. In a country that upholds the principles of good governance
Minister Obert Mpofu, his deputy Murisi Zvizvai and their permanent
secretary, Thankful Musukutwa should have been shown the exit door
for flouting government laid down tender regulations when awarding
mining licenses to Mbada and Canadile. The biggest victims of such
irresponsible behaviour by public officials are the ordinary Zimbabweans
who continue to listen to the old and boring song whose only lyric
is 'the government has no money'
The CRD has formed a
team of eminent community leaders to disseminate research findings
to the local communities informally. These eminent community leaders
include religious leaders, traditional chiefs and senators. They
receive simplified researched information which they feed back to
their particular constituencies, be they churches, rural wards or
senatorial constituencies. There is need to conscientize Zimbabweans
on the root cause of their misery in order to build a national campaign
against the rampant looting of national resources. Exposing corrupt
leaders will help the electorate screen candidates ahead of elections.
(ii) Human Rights
issue violations
The CRD believes
in the rights based approach to development. In other words we view
development as a human right. Our work may ultimately lead to the
prosecution of those committing economic crimes against the people
of Zimbabwe.
Further, the
CRD gathers information and records of human rights violations,
in particular those committed by the uniformed forces against civilians.
The CRD has zero tolerance for state sponsored violence. We believe
the first and most important duty of any civilised government is
to protect its citizens. In an effort to expose the gruesome murder
of innocent Zimbabweans by the state under Operation Hakudzokwi,
the CRD filmed a documentary, Zimbabwe's Blood Diamonds, in
collaboration with its South African based partners. The documentary
drew the attention of the world to the horrors and illicit deals
of Chiadzwa. The documentary reveals all forms of abuse perpetrated
by the uniformed forces in Chiadzwa which include murder, torture,
rape and robbery. President Mugabe has often said 'Zimbabwe
is for Zimbabweans'. We can't agree more with him! If
so then we have the right to demand that all Zimbabweans, regardless
of gender, race, religion or political affiliation, live freely
and peacefully.
Boldness is required
to confront the deep culture of corruption and human rights violations
and sacrifices have to be made. Threats have been issued against
us and we continue to operate in a hostile environment where the
few privileged ones are determined to protect their interests by
any means necessary. The CRD invites Zimbabwe's civil society
to take a firm and united position against looting of national resources
by senior government officials in partnership with foreign nationals.
Unless we unite and confront this vice, the future of our beautiful
country is bleak.
How
we research
The CRD research
is field based, involving sending out researchers to the field for
the gathering of raw data. Our first stage is general information
gathering where we search for clues as to where and how certain
issues are being handled. After general information gathering we
move on to design the appropriate methodologies that can be employed
in order to obtain basic facts that are based on empirical evidence.
The
snowball method
This is our
most treasured research method. When investigating human rights
violations the first source will lead us to the second source who
in turn will lead us to another source(s) and so on. This method
helps to protect our researchers as they are guided from victim
to victim without straying into the path of perpetrators. Further,
when a victim sees the researcher coming in the company of another
victim, he / she can open up to the researcher without any suspicion
whatsoever. In the process the CRD uses the opportunity to offer
counselling to victims, some of whom are still traumatized by the
horrors they went through in Chiadzwa.
Verification
of data
Before sharing
any information with our partners we conduct verification trips
in order to ensure the information sent out is authentic and accurate
to the best of our knowledge. We are aware that those we seek to
expose are ready to pounce on us at the earliest opportunity, hence
we endeavour to apply professional ethics to our research to the
best of our ability.
Governance
The CRD is
governed by an international board comprising 4 men and two women.
The board is responsible for policy formulation, program design
| Tyanai
Masiya (PhD, candidate) |
Board Chair
(PhD, local governance) |
| Paul Scott
(PhD) |
Advisor
for democratisation |
| Erica Belanger
(MA) |
International
Fundraising |
| Henry
Nemaire |
Financial
Advisor |
| Rebecca
White |
Advocacy |
| Farai Maguwu
(MA) |
Executive
Director |
How
you can support the vision
The CRD accepts
donations in cash and kind in order to ensure uninterrupted and
efficient programming
Visit the Centre
for Research and Development
fact
sheet
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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