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Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Diamonds
can revive Zimbabwean economy says Mugabe
Angus Shaw, Associated Press
July 13, 2010
http://cbs2chicago.com/wireapnational/Zimbabwe.s.massive.2.1801455.html
Zimbabwe's president
said on Tuesday, his nation will sell its massive reserves of diamonds
despite not receiving authorization from the world's diamond control
body.
A defiant President Robert
Mugabe on Tuesday told lawmakers diamond sales have "huge potential"
to revive the shattered economy. He said Zimbabwe can account for
one-fourth of the world's diamond supply.
The Kimberley Process
diamond certification scheme has not authorized international sales
amid allegations of killings, human rights violations and corruption
in the massive diamond fields discovered in eastern Zimbabwe in
2006.
"No one should doubt
our resolve to sell our diamonds," Mugabe told lawmakers at
the ceremonial opening of the Parliament in Harare.
Criticism by Western
nations and human rights groups deadlocked a Kimberly Process meeting
in Israel last month that sought approval for the sales after a
regional monitor of the control body reported Zimbabwe had met minimum
international diamond mining standards.
Mugabe said Zimbabwe's
Western adversaries wanted "absurd" conditions put in
place to block the diamond sales.
"We have to remain
rooted in the reality we are the sole guarantors of our economic
emancipation," he said.
Critics of Mugabe say
his economic policies have contributed to precipitous economic decline
in a decade of political turmoil that included the often-violent
seizures of thousands of white-owned farms that disrupted the agriculture-based
economy.
Mugabe acknowledged Tuesday
that key infrastructure, including power and water utilities, roads
and transport services, had fallen into disrepair and housing programs
had come to a standstill over the past decade.
Mining experts estimate
that Zimbabwe's diamond fields, sealed off by police and troops
in the districts of Marange and Chiadzwa near the eastern city of
Mutare, are likely the biggest deposits found in Africa since the
Kimberley fields were discovered in neighboring South Africa a century
ago.
The mines ministry says
it already has about $1.7 billion of diamonds in storage ready to
be sold. Zimbabwe's total international debt is estimated at around
$5.5 billion.
Consignments of diamonds
have been sold illegally. Earlier this year, one shipment was detected
in Dubai and police in neighboring Mozambique reported arresting
alleged diamond dealers carrying more than $1 million in cash hidden
in their car near Zimbabwe's porous eastern border.
Finance Minister Tendai
Biti, a top official of the former opposition Movement for Democratic
Change in a fragile coalition with Mugabe's ZANU PF party, said
Monday many Zimbabweans were still suffering from malnutrition despite
the potential for the country's diamond wealth to restore collapsed
social, health and education services and repair the country's agricultural
infrastructure.
Zimbabwe's diamond producer
status is scheduled to again come under review Wednesday at a meeting
of the World Diamond Council in St. Petersburg, Russia. The mines
ministry, controlled by Mugabe's party in the coalition with Prime
Minister Morgan Tsvangirai, the former opposition leader, denies
wrongdoing and accuses human rights groups of "peddling falsehoods"
over rights violations.
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