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Marange, Chiadzwa and other diamond fields and the Kimberley Process - Index of articles
Abundant
mine in Zimbabwe bears the 'blood diamond' stigma
Jan Raath, Deutsche Press-Agentur
August 05, 2010
http://www.earthtimes.org/articles/news/338056,diamond-stigma-feature.html
It may be a spring of
wealth that almost at a stroke could end the economic despair of
Zimbabwe, but the sprawling Chiadzwa diamond field in the east of
the country is more likely a deadly bear trap.
Chiadzwa, is regarded
as the richest diamond find of the century. Over the past nine months,
rudimentary mining only in one small area of the field has reportedly
yielded 4 million carats, worth around 2 billion US dollars.
But human rights groups
have labelled the gems that originate from the mines "blood
diamonds" because of the strong-arm actions of the government
of President Robert Mugabe to secure the 66,000-hectare field from
illegal miners.
The military and the
secret police holds the area and what happens in and around it in
a grip of fear and silence. The issue of rampant diamond smuggling,
alleged by soldiers deployed to protect the area, has been taken
up by the Kimberley Process (KP), the world watchdog on blood diamonds
used to finance wars.
On Monday, the body is
to send a mission to Zimbabwe to test its compliance at Chiadzwa.
The visit comes just weeks after the KP lifted a ban on exports
from the diamond field, allowing two consignments to be sold.
The ban was imposed after
a brutal crackdown by the army in in mid-2008 on exports after a
brutal crackdown by the army to drive out around 35,000 illegal
diamond diggers, in which some 200 people were reportedly killed.
"Zimbabwe has had
many months to address the concerns that have arisen in Chiadzwa,"
says Annie Dunneback of Global Witness, one of the civil society
groups that form part of the KP.
"For us, progress
should be evidence of an end to human rights abuses and the very
negative role that the military is playing. They should be protecting
the area, not running syndicates," she told the German Press
Agency dpa.
Soldiers have been accused
of involvement in syndicates that work alongside illegal diggers
in mining and selling Chiadzwa gems.
In May, local civil rights
researcher Farai Maguwu handed a visiting KP monitor a military
briefing leaked to him on the situation at Chiadzwa.
The document reported
the murder of an illegal digger by a soldier, cases of armed robbery
and other "gross indiscipline" by the army deployed around
the diamond field. It also detailed an increase in illegal panning
by diggers in league with soldiers and observed that troops were
faced with inadequate food and allowances.
The document appeared
to confirmed human rights groups reports, and contradict the government's
assertion that the diamond field was completely under control with
no human rights or criminal abuses by the army.
Maguwu was promptly arrested,
and held in police cells for 40 days, often semi-naked on bitterly
cold winter nights, and denied medication and access to lawyers.
Only the intervention of a High Court judge saw him freed on bail,
on a charge of "publishing information prejudicial to the security
forces."
"You won't find
anyone who will tell you what's going on on the ground at Chiadzwa
now," says one lawyer in the nearby city of Harare, asking
not to be named for fear of victimization.
"After what happened
to Maguwu, everyone is frightened."
In the dingier areas
of central Harare, slick young men juggling mobile phones openly
offer diamonds for sale to passers-by.
John Chimunhu, a reporter
on the local weekly, The Zimbabwean, said he posed as a buyer and
was led inside a guarded police compound to meet a supplier whom,
he said, was a senior policeman. No deal took place because the
officer was out, according to Chimunhu.
Trust Maanda
of Zimbabwe Lawyers
for Human Rights said the organization had represented about
1,500 of the illegal diggers who were brought to court in Mutare.
"They were beaten
with baton sticks, sjamboks (heavy whips) and many had dog bites,
he said. People had terrible injuries. There were many broken limbs."
"They didn't bring
anyone to court," Maanda said.
A report by New York-based
Human Rights Watch, based on interviews with survivors, said about
200 diggers were murdered in cold blood, often from helicopter gunships,
an their bodies dumped in pits dug by the illegal diggers.
"Its going to be
very difficult to find out if anything is going on," said an
official of another of the KP human rights organizations, requesting
anonymity.
"They can sweep
everything under the carpet, remove all the illegal diggers, put
the soldiers guarding the area on best behavior and shut down the
smuggling while we are there, and then let it all out when we are
gone."
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