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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


  • Kimberley Process maintains diamond mining suspension
    ACTSA
    June 25, 2010

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    Kimberley Process (KP) representatives have continued the export ban for rough diamonds from the Marange area of Zimbabwe after failing to reach a consensus at a meeting held in Israel on 21-23 June. The outcome was welcomed by the KP civil society coalition as the 'least bad' outcome. The KP is meant to monitor the production of diamonds to ensure that those offered for sale are produced in conflict-free areas.

    The meeting discussed the continued human rights violations in the area including the arrest and detention of Farai Maguwu, Director for the Centre for Research and Development (CRD), who had highlighted Zimbabwe's poor adherence to the KP. According to Human Rights Watch, police officials "beat up, arrested, and detained members of Maguwu's family" before doing the same to him. "If Zimbabwe is jailing activists for writing about abuses connected to diamond mining, then it is hardly meeting the minimum standards for Kimberley Process membership." Talks are scheduled to resume on July 14-15 in St Petersburg.

    Global Political Agreement (GPA) remains in stalemate

    The GPA between ZANU-PF, the MDC-T and the MDC-M, continues in its stalemate position. A South African negotiation team continues to monitor the situation but has been unable to assist with the deadlock. The Elders, a group of former heads of state, Nobel Peace Prize recipients and prominent human rights defenders, criticised the lack of progress, suggesting that it was impossible and even dangerous for Zimbabwe to hold elections in the current political situation.

    The EU head of delegation to Harare, Ambassador Xavier Marchal, stressed that Zimbabwe's relationship with the EU cannot be built upon while breaches of the agreement are widespread. "Everything is based on the successful implementation of the GPA," he said.

    A new era for Zimbabwean Media?

    The newly established Zimbabwe Media Commission (ZMC) has granted the Zimbabwean Congress of Trade Unions (ZCTU) the right to publish its newspaper, 'The Worker', weekly, rather than monthly. The ZMC has also given the Daily News, Daily Gazette, The Financial Gazette and The Mail licenses to publish in a move widely heralded as an end to ten years of media censorship. Over the last decade Zimbabweans have only had access to Sunday weeklies, and in more recent times, the strongly oppositional 'Zimbabwean', though this was printed outside the country.

    There are still reservations about the body set up to overcome the suppression of the media enforced by President Mugabe. Mr. Mahoso, the Chief Executive of the new ZMC was formerly the secretariat of the controversial Media and Information Commission, which closed four newspapers. Television and radio censorship also remain outside the jurisdiction of the new body.

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