|
Back to Index
This article participates on the following special index pages:
Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Undercover
at the Chiadzwa diamond fields
Dan
McDougall
September 21, 2009
http://denfordmagora.blogspot.com/2009/09/undercover-at-chiadzwa-diamond-fields.html
The mailashas emerge
as cautiously as impala from the shadows of scorched yellow kikuyu
grass that fringes the long highway to Mutare. Their name translates
as 'smugglers'. It's our first sight of them. There are three in
all and they're no more than 14 years old.
They reach out into the
road at the approach of our slowing BMW and take a deadly gamble,
forming their fingers into a distinctive diamond shape. In their
damp palms are tiny grains of diamond. They have chosen the final
thralls of dusk - a time of shadows and distraction, when the sights
of army patrol rifles are blinded by the vast and sinking orange
glow in the sky - to make their sales pitch to a car full of strangers.
Clicking off
from his mother-tongue, Shona, our translator throws down his mobile
phone in a panic and shouts at me to drive on.
'We mustn't stop,' he
screams. 'They'll be dead in a week. The road is littered with the
bones of smugglers. They are signing a death warrant by sticking
their necks out on this cursed road.'
We've driven
ten hours from the South African border in a fog of frayed nerves
and off-road diversions to avoid army checkpoints. Posing as black-market
diamond traders, we're travelling towards the very hell they are
fleeing: Zimbabwe's Wild East. Here, within hiking range of the
road we're driving, are the remote diamond fields of Marange, shallow
earth mines uncompromisingly controlled by Robert Mugabe's henchmen.
The full extent of the
diamond fields in eastern Zimbabwe became clear following discoveries
made in June 2006. They're vast - 400 square miles - making the
scrubland amid the bleakly beautiful mountainscape possibly the
world's biggest diamond field. The finds were made by British prospecting
firm African Consolidated Resources (ACR). It had just taken over
the rights to explore the area from De Beers, which had failed to
renew its mining licences despite having found diamonds before 2006.
There was an
outcry in the West. Critics such as Global Witness claimed ACR was
making little more than a Faustian pact with Mugabe, the most vilified
leader on the African stage.
Maybe it was fateful,
then, that in September 2006, Mugabe's Zanu-PF government reneged
on the deal and seized back the mining rights to the region. When
Zimbabwe's hyper-inflation made army pay almost worthless, soldiers
rioted in the capital Harare.
Without the patronage
of the military, Mugabe faced losing power. Against the ruling of
the country's courts, he ceded mining operations to the direct control
of the police and army.
Amid public confusion
over ownership, a diamond rush began around the Marange fields.
Over 10,000 illegal artisanal miners invaded the site and began
working small plots. But by January 2007, the governor of the Reserve
Bank of Zimbabwe, Gideon Gono, warned that the country was losing
up to $50 million a week through gold and diamond smuggling.
The response
of both the police and, in particular, the army to bring their interests
under control was brutal. Launching Operation No Return in October
2008, the army ordered a shoot-on-sight policy, killing hundreds
of illegal miners. Men were strafed by helicopter gunship, and a
cordon was set up around the diamond fields. As many as 10,000 villagers
living near the fields were relocated 15 miles away.
The army then set about
doing the unthinkable: recruiting those same villagers under gunpoint
and forcing them to dig for diamonds. This is the situation that
remains today.
The UN is the only international
body that can isolate pariah nations dealing in 'blood diamonds'
- stones produced in conflict zones - and salve our consciences
when we buy jewellery. It's backed by the Kimberley Process, whereby
diamond-producing and trading nations commit to strict self-regulation
to keep blood diamonds out of the world's supply.
As a Kimberley Process
review panel prepares to rule on Zimbabwe's future as an exporter
of gems, a Livemagazine investigation has uncovered shocking first-hand
evidence of the violent enslavement of alluvial miners in the eastern
badlands of the former British colony. These men, women and children
are being forced at the barrel of a gun by soldiers to dig out tiny
diamonds from the earth with their bare hands, to pay the troops'
wages and thereby keep Mugabe in power.
Our report,
which we're submitting to the review panel, comes just weeks after
the Zimbabwean government assured the world its diamonds were ethical.
The situation as it stands makes a mockery of the Kimberley Process.
The young men stand at
the roadside shaking. The youngest, weeping with fear, shouts and
pleads with his captors. His mouth is foaming. Heknows that this
is just the beginning of his torment. Handcu-ffed together and forced
to lean against a baobab tree, their trousers at their ankles, blood
streams down their buttocks - a common sight in war zones: a humiliation
and a warning to others. The soldiers sit nearby smoking cigarettes,
waiting for the truck to come so they can carry on their torturing
in private.
Everyone on this road
is suspected of being a diamond smuggler. The road to Mutare has
become one of the most militarised in all Africa. Army checkpoints
scar the highway at 500-yard intervals. Everywhere is the detritus
of soldiers: cigarettes, moonshine bottles and bullet casings. Scorched
earth from cooking fires stains the lay-bys. At regular intervals,
women stand behind pulled-over buses, their hands stretched in the
air as their private parts are invaded and frisked by scruff-y soldiers
and radicalised youngsters from the Zanu-PF's youth training centres.
According to
a 2009 Human Rights
Watch report, army brigades are now being rotated in the Marange
region to satisfy senior ranking officers from diff-erent divisions
so that more soldiers can profit from the diamond trade. The same
report also states that villagers from the area, some of them children,
are being forced to work in mines controlled by military syndicates.
At times you can almost
make out the word ' diamonds' in slow-motion on their lips as the
young soldiers ruthlessly tug at bra straps, sexually abusing, humiliating
and tormenting their subjects. The motivation for the police and
military to stop the flow of smuggling is simple and calculating:
diamonds are their domain.
We are posing as diamond
buyers from Israel, and are on the road just south of Mutare, the
provincial capital on the Mozambique border. At each checkpoint
the car is painstakingly searched. The soldiers will then pull us
aside and produce small gritty slivers of diamond from hidden belt
pockets in their military fatigues. The going rate for poor stones
is $35 a gram. In the West, the price would be 20 times as high.
The closer
we get to the mining fields the purer the stones become and the
more our translator warns us our lives are in danger. Even with
our cover as diamond dealers we are out on a limb here. At each
checkpoint the soldiers tell us that most of the dealers are black
- Nigerians.
We decide the
only safe way for us into the diamond fields is to park ten miles
away and hike into the bush at 4am. As we set off, in the darkness,
everyone is terrified.
'If we are caught they'll
shoot us and bury us in the bush until our bones are ready to be
taken away elsewhere,' our translator says, on the verge of tears.
Heading to the diamond
field of Chiadzwa, in the Marange district, we hear in the wilderness
a pack of wild bush dogs ripping apart the carcass of one of their
own. Hunted down by forest-dwelling illegal diamond prospectors
and with no prey on which to feed, the desperate beasts have turned
to cannibalism.
After three
hours we're entering Chiadzwa's alluvial mine fields; a further
three hours in the bush, doubts set in and the fear that we're lost
deepens. We continue for five hours more even though we run out
of water and are forced to drink from bore holes, where donkey droppings
float on the surface of the water. Faced with sunstroke, there's
no alternative. Finally we come across a group of illegal miners,
each panning the parched, sandy earth.
From below the mountainside
where we're standing, others emerge like shrews from holes in the
ground, their black faces stained with grey dust and sand, their
bloodshot eyes illuminated by dripping wax candles. They are some
of the thousands of miners in the region who dig through the earth
with blunt pickaxes and bare hands.
Some of the men and women
who scrape through the dead earth here call the area the 'Eye' -
as the mine gets more challenging and dangerous, the further you're
drawn into it.
Most, without irony,
call it churu chamai Mujuru - Mrs Mujuru's ant-hill. Mrs Mujuru
is the country's Vice President and wife of its former army chief,
General Solomon Mujuru. She is well known for her fondness for diamonds.
The dream that forces
the miners to take extreme risks is not just a simple frosty-grey
stone. They believe diamonds can bring liberation from their bonded
status. Success is a stone no bigger than a newborn child's thumbnail;
that's the price of freedom.
Like all miners
in the region, these people are now working in small syndicates
for the Zimbabwean military, each team satisfying individual soldiers
who must pass the best gems further up the chain of command. According
to the Human Rights Watch report, the syndicates are being operated
with the full sanction of the Harare government.
The report says that
at a time when Zimbabwe is struggling to pay civil servants and
soldiers a stipend of barely $100 a month, the extra income from
diamond mining for soldiers is serving 'to mollify a constituency
whose loyalty to Robert Mugabe's Zanu-PF, in the context of ongoing
political strife, is essential'.
One of the miners, Jona,
emerges from the ground shrouded in dust, looking like a ghost.
At first, startled by our presence, he moves to run but he stretches
out his palm for a few South African Rand in return for conversation.
'We have no choice but
to do this,' he says. 'The soldiers rounded us up in the night and
they have threatened to kill our families. It's always the diamonds.
What do they mean to people in the West? What do they mean to you
when my people, the Manyika, are dead men walking?'
He contemptuously
spits out bitter peanut shells.
'We are forever in the
eye of our killer: the Zimbabwean army sniper, the policeman, the
spy. Our enemy is brutal but we must feed our children and mining
here in the darkness is the only way out. It is pitiful and many
of us have been killed but what else can we do?'
Jona says the biggest
stone he has found in the fields was several years ago - from his
rough description, a diamond of around 2.20 carats.
'We worked for the police
back then and things weren't as intense, so we could get stones
out. I sold that one for $200 to a businessman from Harare. You
could see through a corner of it like a piece of glass.'
I tell Jona his stone
might have fetched as much as £7,000 in Antwerp or London.
He shrugs and kicks the ground at his feet.
'It was my chance to
get out but I had to split the money and then, later, the police
came to my house and took most of the rest. I was left with about
$100 and they beat me to find that but I didn't give in. They hit
my kidneys with batons over and over again. I passed blood for months
and couldn't walk. But I kept my money.'
As we speak,
a second miner in his mid-twenties approaches us and waves his pickaxe
mockingly. He refuses to give his name but allows us to photograph
him digging. He bears the scars and sorrows of a man three times
his age. In his cracked hands are a few tiny grains of what looks
like glass: tiny diamond slivers, practically worthless. He seems
to think we are making a purchase, so he eggs us on to handle the
miserable grey stones.
'We've been
working this site for a month but found only a few diamonds. Further
up the valley there is more promise - there we use shovels to dam
off small sections of the streams. There are bigger diamonds in
the centre of the Eye but the military hover over everyone there
at gunpoint, watching the miners like hawks. When they are done,
they search mouths, anal passages and even rip open wounds to see
if miners have hidden stones in their flesh.'
As the man speaks the
rain suddenly comes down hard, washing the blood-red mud from the
ground over his bare feet.
'You must go,' he says.
'If they find you here they will kill us all.'
Just as the history of
the Arab Gulf states is tied to the region's oil, the discovery
of diamonds in Africa has shaped the continent's borders and remains
one of the leading causes of conflict. It is no accident that Africa's
most war-torn countries of the past decade - Sierra Leone and the
Democratic Republic of Congo - are also among its most diamond-rich
nations, as well as the poorest and least developed.
In 2000 the UN responded
to international outrage over illegal trade in blood diamonds from
despotic nations such as Liberia and Ivory Coast by creating the
Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS). It requires all exporters
to register their diamonds with their respective governments before
any can be certified legal and shipped abroad with the paperwork.
Since then,
mostly through clever marketing on the part of the diamond industry,
the issue of blood diamonds has largely fallen off the political
agenda. This is despite the appeals of pressure groups such as Amnesty
International and Global Witness, who claim the problem is still
a long way from being resolved.
The reality is that across
the African continent, millions of miners - many of them children
- continue to scour the earth at gunpoint looking for gems. Most
of those that are found are sold well below their market value to
illegal diamond traders.
The stones are then smuggled
out to cutting centres around the world, without tax being paid.
This means that none of the benefits of such mining find their way
back to the people of Africa. Where they are mined responsibly -
Botswana, South Africa, Namibia - diamonds can contribute to development
and stability.
Where governments
are corrupt, soldiers pitiless and borders porous, the stones remain
agents of slave labour, murder, dismemberment, displacement and
economic collapse.
Today in Zimbabwe,
diamonds are continuing to destroy lives. But until the international
community brands these gems as 'blood diamonds', stones from one
of the world's most troubled nations will continue to find their
way on to London's Bond Street.
In some respects, Zimbabwe's
soldiers have a tough job keeping track of their prized assets.
Diamonds are tradeable and portable; they can be mined with a pick
and shovel in many places. They also can be smuggled in many of
the ways drugs are not. With diamonds there is no odour to aid border
guards with dogs. Over the years, diamonds have been ingested, concealed
in body cavities, hidden in wounds. Desperate people do desperate
things - and never more so than when there is the prospect of riches
in place of utter poverty.
A diamond rush - as has
taken place in Zimbabwe - happens for a reason: people who live
around the alluvial fields are starving and desperate.
'Young men cannot bear
to watch their mothers, sisters and wives starve to death,' says
our translator.
But those same factors
that see miners lose diamonds to the brutal middlemen also work
in their favour. On an international scale, tracing stones is virtually
impossible.
Michael Vaughan, executive
board member of the Diamantkring, one of Antwerp's four main diamond
exchanges, said recently that regardless of protocol and the regulations
imposed by the Kimberley Process, his entire business depended on
trust. If diamonds have been smuggled by African rebels and re-packaged
elsewhere he'd never know about it.
Eli Haas, president of
the New York Diamond Dealers' Club, goes one step further.
'There is no way to tell
where a diamond comes from. Diamonds don't have identifying marks
and probably never will. You just can't look at a diamond and say,
yes, it comes from Sierra Leone or the Congo. Only God knows this.'
A lawyer in Mutare, Zimbabwe's
diamond capital, said, 'The diamond industry is a licence to print
money for the Zimbabwean military. With any commodity in Africa,
it's about securing your logistics and export routes. You run the
army so you control the people, turning them into slaves to dig
the earth for diamonds.
'You own the highways
and control the checkpoints so getting the diamonds out is even
simpler. Army and police lorries have the rule of the highways so
getting to the borders, South Africa in the south or Mozambique
in the east, is never a problem. You control customs on one side
and bribe officials on the other. With guns, brute force and a
desperate and terrified local population, everything runs like clockwork.'
We've been directed to
a remote village at the edge of the Chiadzwa field. We enter the
compound but there's a ghostly silence. The residents have long
gone, beaten out of their homes by the military and moved 25 miles
away. But a whistle goes out: watchmen looking out for soldiers.
In a small hut we find Tendaimoyo. The search for his story has
brought us as deep into the bush as we can get.
'We can live here by
day, and then at night we go out and dig,' he says. 'But we change
it around. I know what happens when we get caught digging outside
the syndicates.'
As we speak, Tendaimoyo
pulls down his trousers and bares the livid scars that cover his
buttocks - the aftermath of a brutal army baton attack.
Sometimes reporting from
Africa is hard; unless you have seen it for yourself, you are wary
of fully accepting any account at face value. But these wounds are
unmistakeable; they are raw and open and stand out against his skin.
He sits in excruciating pain and tells us he is not finished. On
his chest there are puncture marks from knives and through his kneecap
a piercing hole - an open wound the size of a golf ball.
'The soldiers came here
and found us at a digging site close by,' he says. 'We were working
for them at that time but they told us we had produced no diamonds
and we deserved to be punished. They gathered a crowd around me
and stabbed me through the leg with their bayonets.
'Another of our group
was stabbed in the stomach. They then beat us to the point that
I couldn't feel the pain any more, and exposed our buttocks like
they were playing a game. I looked at my two friends on the ground
across from me. Their legs were streaming with blood. One of them
had died, and blood was streaming from his eyes and ears. I passed
out.'
In the dark recesses
of his hut, Tendaimoyo is boiling traditional madhumbe, a wild indigenous
tuber root found only in the foothills of Chiadzwa.
'My journey here was
for my family. I was a cow herder but the owner of the cattle died,
and the army took his animals for food. Then the army told us they
wanted our land for mining so they poisoned our water to forcibly
relocate us. Our only chance is here in the dirt. I have nothing
to lose. They almost killed me before. As I lay on the ground I
made my peace with my family - but they stopped.'
Tendaimoyo told me he
had also survived the helicopter strafing by the Zimbabwean military.
'When the helicopters
first came they dropped tear gas for the first hour. Then they started
shooting. People were running wildly everywhere, stumbling over
the dead. I saw children die. After it was over, they moved in with
dogs and I witnessed women being bitten to death.
'They raid us every week
now, even though 90 per cent of the miners here work for them as
slaves. The raids are part of a circus, normally to empty the fields
of workers so foreign inspectors cannot interview them.
'Now the army
carries out raids - small units go out and target miners who aren't
cooperating. They don't shoot them - they beat their kidneys until
they bleed and the men pass out and die. Their bodies are put into
holes and covered up. The site is then made off-limits and when
the army comes back round again to remove the bones, the flesh has
been eaten by insects and rats.'
At least a dozen
miners interviewed by Live claimed that plain-clothes offi cers
from Zimbabwe's Criminal Investigation Department had started the
diamond rush by turning up in the Mutare area with suitcases full
of freshly printed notes. The men said they'd been given the money
by Gideon Gorno, the head of Zimbabwe's fragile banking system.
At the time they claimed to be representing a government company
called Fidelity. But there is no record that such a body ever existed.
According to the miners, the difference between selling black-market
diamonds to the Zimbabwe CID in 2007 and the situation today is
their freedom to move.
'We are in a locked-down
world,' says Tendaimoyo
.
'Everywhere there are patrols looking for diamonds. Women are intimately
searched, men have teeth pulled out with pliers as a warning to
others not to smuggle diamonds in their mouths.
'Before we were being
exploited by corrupt politicians making a killing from our stones.
Now we're prisoners and slaves. Things were better before. Each
day they get worse. I was almost killed a few weeks ago and each
day others like me are abandoned in the bush, eaten by dogs, unable
to crawl out of the pits.'
As we hike out of the
bush in the dusk, the journey is fraught and terrifying. At each
rustle of grass we hit the ground, waved down by our point man.
Suddenly we come across a village, somehow bypassed in the clearances.
From the valley below the sound of prayer and penitence is floating
across the air from the river. At the bank a dozen middle-aged women
are gathered in the water in the red glow of evening. Their skirts,
branded with biblical passages and proclamations to the Lord, are
wrapped up to their knees in the murky water, exposing their heavy-set
legs. The pastor is dunking one of their number into the water,
time and time again, to rapture.
As we pass them, their
hymns are lost to the noise of the bush. Mice biting and scratching,
insects buzzing and in the distance the violent crack of a rifle
firing somewhere in the remote hinterland.
Everyone holds their
breath.
The Limpopo River flows
before me precisely as Rudyard Kipling once found it: 'Grey-green...
greasy... set about with fever trees.' On a distant bank, from the
stumpy shadows, come the refugees - a long and familiar string of
terrified Zimbabweans clutching overflowing plastic bags stuffed
with clothes, Bibles and dreams of a new life in Cape Town.
An untamed no-man's land
of smugglers, corrupt security forces and a never-ending flow of
illicit human traffic across from the third world to the developed
world, it is boom time in the drab South African border town of
Musina, a remote community that has found itself at the centre of
one of the world's worst refugee crises.
Today South Africa's
borders are a shambles. There are just 190 police officers to control
2,300 miles of coastline and 283 officers on its 3,000 mile-long
land border. As a direct result, there are between three and five
million illegal immigrants in the country.
A 2008 report by South
Africa's Auditor-General found no specific border intelligence had
been carried out since 2004, nor has there been any specialised
training for border control. Land points of entry either have insufficient
or no critical equipment such as baggage scanners, CCTV cameras
and hand-held explosive-detection systems. Where these are in place,
they are often not used.
For the Zimbabweans fleeing
oppression to a life of menial labour such incompetence is, in a
perverse way, a godsend, at least if they can live long enough in
South Africa without being assaulted and extorted by the police
and xenophobic mobs. For diamond smugglers it is similarly an easy
route out with gems.
At Musina's United Reformed
Church the pews are packed with Zimbabweans praising Jesus. Some,
despite their devotion, are full-time smugglers, members of trafficking
syndicates such as the Maguma Guma gang, who 'help' hundreds of
border jumpers trying to cross illegally into South Africa every
day.
Using their
contacts to pay off Zimbabwean security officers, the gangs bypass
immigration and assist jumpers to cross the river on the underside
of a disused train bridge at the Beitbridge border crossing. On
the South African side of the border, they have cut holes in the
three barbed wire fences. Using mobile phones to alert one another,
they wait in the bush until army and police vans patrolling the
border have passed and give the signal for jumpers to run through
to the other side. This is all for a negotiated price of around
$10.
Outside Musina's
church, Mutseti Savo, 32, claims he lost both his house and his
job in Mugabe's continuing Operation
Murambatsvina ('Drive out the rubbish'), in which soldiers,
police and ruling-party militias used murder, rape and violence
to destroy the homes and small businesses of hundreds of thousands
of poor people living on the outer edges of Zimbabwe's towns. Like
many others who lost everything, he drifted east to the diamond
fields.
'I know blood diamonds
are all about war but there is no war in my country - except for
a government that fights its own people. Unemployment and starvation
lead you to do desperate things, to put your life on the line. Diamonds,
gold, drugs... anything to get by and keep your family alive. In
Zimbabwe there is no right and wrong any more, there is eating and
starving - even now, when the West claims everything is good again.
This is a lie.'
In the background a large
group of Zimbabwean women sing hymns and choruses in Shona. I ask
what they mean.
'These people are good
Christians but even Christians can find it hard to forgive,' says
Savo.
'These are not hymns,
they are anti-Mugabe songs that are illegal back home. There they
would be shot for singing such songs.'
As we walk away Savo
sticks out a long pink tongue. Underneath is a tiny black diamond.
'OK, we've talked now.
How much will you pay?'
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.
TOP
|