|
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
Diamonds
sales a false economic dawn
IRIN News
August 26, 2010
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=90260
An auction of Zimbabwean
diamonds has created an air of expectation that the country's
economic plight will be eased or even improved, but the stones realized
as little as a fifth of their value, and most of the proceeds are
expected to benefit controversial mining companies.
The Kimberley Process
Certification Scheme - an initiative to prevent conflict diamonds
from entering the multibillion dollar global market - allowed Zimbabwe
to sell diamonds from the Chiadzwa area of Marange in Manicaland
Province. The diamond fields - reputedly the largest find in a century
- have been mired in controversy, with constant allegations of human
rights abuses since they were discovered in 2006.
Amnesty International
has reported that soldiers deployed to guard the diamond fields
have forced people to mine the diamonds, which were then smuggled
out of the country, while other reports have indicated that security
forces were killing illegal miners.
Primrose Mudzengi, 38,
a teacher in the capital, Harare, earns a US$150 a month, which
she has to juggle to cover the rent, school fees for her two children,
food and transport.
"Civil servants
like me are virtually living on slave wages. I am confident that
our salaries will improve significantly once diamonds are mined
and sold on a large scale, and the government can spare more money
for us," Mudzengi told IRIN. "I will be able to take my
children on holiday as I used to do before the economy started sliding,
and stop living like a beggar."
Dickson Chofamba, a Harare-based
government mechanic, told IRIN: "Civil servants have suffered
for too long, and the discovery of the diamonds should give us a
chance to restore our dignity at the workplace. The PSA [Public
Service Association, which represents government employees,] should
ensure that we get most of the money."
The president
of the Progressive
Teachers Union of Zimbabwe (PTUZ), Raymond Majongwe, was more
pragmatic. It would be "folly for civil servants to think that
the diamonds would improve their lives", he told IRIN.
Poor
returns
"There are sharks
out there who want to line their pockets first and, as it stands,
there is a lack of clarity on how much the diamonds would give to
our economy by way of job creation, and the value of the diamond
deposits is not known," he said.
It is estimated that
Zimbabwe would need about US$8 billion dollars to resuscitate the
economy. According to mining minister Obert Mpofu the auction raised
US$56.4 million, of which the government will receive US$30 million,
compared to an earlier estimate by finance minister Tendai Biti
that the auction raised US$46 million, with US$15 million coming
into government coffers.
Eric Bloch, an economic
analyst, told IRIN that ahead of the auction it was hoped the diamonds
would sell for US$400 to US$500 per carat, but only "around
US$80 per carat" was achieved.
"Contrary to the
current popular feeling, there is little evidence that diamonds
will translate into our economic panacea," Bloch told IRIN.
"Hopes can easily turn into disillusionment; the economy will
not turn around overnight, and the gains will be minimal for some
time."
The government will receive
10 percent in royalties and 25 percent as corporate tax from profits
made by the mining companies, while the Zimbabwe Mining Development
Corporation (ZMDC), a government parastatal, will get a small dividend,
Bloch said.
"What many people
are failing to realize is that the bulk of the money will not be
going to government, but to the mining companies. It is important
to develop the other sectors of the economy if the economic situation
is to improve," he commented.
Mbada Diamonds and Canadile
Miners entered into joint ventures with the Zimbabwe Mining Development
Corporation to exploit the diamond concessions, but Annie Dunnebacke,
a campaigner for Global Witness, told IRIN that the nature of these
deals remained "opaque".
'Drug
traffickers, smugglers or plain crooks'
"According
to first-hand accounts obtained by Global Witness, as well as media
reports, Minister Mpofu told the [Parliamentary Portfolio Committee
on Mines and Energy] hearing that he was aware of the 'shady business
deals' of some Mbada and Canadile investors, and his own research
showed 'that people in the diamond business globally are drug-traffickers,
smugglers, or plain crooks,'" Global Witness said in a recent
report: Return of the Blood
Diamond.
Mbada chairman Robert
Mhlanga told participants at the auction that his company would
ensure that "every carat of diamonds mined by Mbada Diamonds
shall be accounted for", while the Zimbabwe Diamond Technology
Centre, a newly formed company, announced in a recent statement
that it would ensure that "leakages are minimized, accountability
enhanced, and compliance made much more easier".
Innocent Makwiramiti,
a Harare-based economist and former chief executive officer of the
Zimbabwe National Chamber of Commerce (ZNCC), warned that leakages
of diamonds would continue, and could result in the reversal of
certification for future diamond sales.
"There are powerful
people who are likely to use their positions to smuggle the diamonds
out of the country, while illegal mining might continue for some
time. In addition, authorities mandated to oversee the mining and
sale of the mineral can take advantage of their offices and use
all means to understate the amount and quality of diamonds for personal
gain," Makwiramiti told IRIN.
Another auction for the
sale of 4.4 million carats is scheduled for September 2010, from
which government expects to raise US$1.7 billion, but not all industry
players support the KPCS recommendation to give Zimbabwe the opportunity
to auction the Marange diamond stockpile.
The influential
New York-based Rapaport Diamond Trading Network (Rapnet) has threatened
its members with expulsion. "Rapaport strongly advises all
diamond buyers not to trade in KP certified diamonds from Marange,
and to request written assurance from their suppliers that their
diamonds have not been sourced from Marange," Rapnet said in
a statement.
"Members found to
have knowingly offered Marange diamonds for sale on Rapnet will
be expelled."
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
|