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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
Crisis
averted by last-minute agreement on Zimbabwe diamonds
Partnership
Africa Canada (PAC)
July 16, 2010
Campaign groups Partnership
Africa Canada and Global Witness today acknowledged that a deal
reached by the Kimberley Process (KP) diamond certification scheme
could pave the way for reinforced oversight of diamond production
in Zimbabwe, while allowing for limited exports.
The agreement, if fully
implemented, would help end abuses in the country's Marange diamond
fields. It was finalised this evening at a meeting in St Petersburg
by the government of Zimbabwe and other members of the anti-conflict
diamond scheme.
Under the terms of the
agreement, Zimbabwe will be allowed to export a limited number of
diamonds produced since 28 May in two sites in Marange. At the same
time a Kimberley Process Review Mission will visit the country to
assess conditions in the region and compliance with the scheme's
standards. Zimbabwe will be able to export one more batch of diamonds
at the start of September, but any exports thereafter will be contingent
on measurable improvements in the diamond fields.
Nadim Kara, of Partnership
Africa Canada, said: "This agreement is far from perfect, and
it will take considerable efforts by all parties to the Kimberley
Process, especially Zimbabwe, to make it work. The crisis in Zimbabwe's
diamond sector should act as a wake-up call to governments and the
diamond industry: this issue is too important, both to consumers
and to diamond mining communities, to keep lurching from crisis
to crisis. The system needs urgent and far-reaching reform at a
time when consumers are demanding action on blood diamonds."
The Marange diamond fields
have been plagued by serious human rights abuses perpetrated by
the Zimbabwean security forces, along with systematic smuggling.
In November 2009 the Kimberley Process agreed a 'Joint Work Plan'
with Zimbabwe to bring the country back into compliance with the
scheme's minimum standards.
To date, progress on
the conditions in the work plan which address the fundamental causes
of violence in Marange has been limited. Today's agreement renews
and strengthens the commitment of the Zimbabwean government and
the KP to resolve all aspects of the work plan and links continued
exports of diamonds to progress on the ground in Marange.
Annie Dunnebacke of Global
Witness says: "It is too early to give a final verdict. Ultimately
the success or otherwise of this agreement will be determined by
what the main players do next. The ball is now in Zimbabwe's court
to make good on its promises and act to end one of the most egregious
cases of diamond-related violence for many years. We fervently hope
that the governments in the Kimberley Process will, for their part,
hold Zimbabwe to its commitments in order to begin to restore the
battered integrity of the scheme."
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