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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
Ambivalence
feeds Zimbabwe's diamond tyranny
Jason Moyo,
Mail and Guardian (SA)
May 20, 2011
http://mg.co.za/article/2011-05-20-ambivalence-feeds-zimbabwes-diamond-tyranny/
Why is South Africa enabling
corrupt and thuggish elements of Zimbabwe's government to benefit
from ill-gotten diamond revenues? The question is being asked after
South Africa snubbed a recent emergency meeting in Dubai of the
Kimberley Process, the initiative that regulates the trade in the
world's rough diamonds and ensures they are "conflict free".
Zimbabwe has since rejected
the agreement reached there in April.
The meeting
was called to find a way forward on regularising diamond
production in Marange in eastern Zimbabwe, where state-sponsored
human rights abuses and smuggling have been rampant since 2007.
Late last year legal exports of Marange diamonds were restricted
because of a lack of consensus within the Kimberley Process in measuring
Zimbabwe's progress in meeting agreed benchmarks.
South Africa's
absence from Dubai was a departure from its past role as an anchor
nation of the Kimberley Process, including having chaired it in
2003. Its absence was also sharply at odds with its rebuke of Zanu-PF
at the recent Southern African Development Community (SADC) summit
in Livingstone. There President Jacob Zuma's tough position was
informed by some hard truths: Zanu-PF's failure to keep its side
of the global political agreement that underpins the national unity
government, increasing evidence of Zanu-PF leading the intimidation
and attacks on the opposition, and a concern shared with other SADC
countries that, if left unchecked, Zanu-PF's lawlessness could spill
over Zimbabwe's borders.
Diamonds underlie
much of Zanu-PF's misbehaviour. The finance ministry is now controlled
by the Movement for Democratic Change so Zanu-PF found a game-changer
in Marange - it provides riches to a coterie of military and political
insiders with which they can fund off-budget activities such as
intimidating political opponents.
Hence the disconnection
in South Africa's diplomatic logic. It criticises Zanu-PF's misdeeds
but looks the other way when it comes to what fuels much of that
behaviour.
Perhaps one reason for
this is that South Africa's Kimberley Process representation has
been politicised. South Africa was represented by civil servants
from the department of international relations until earlier this
year when they were replaced by Susan Shabangu, the minister of
mining. She immediately took to parroting her Zimbabwean counterpart,
Obert Mpofu. Both insist that diamond production in Marange has
been deemed compliant with the "minimum requirements"
of the Kimberley Process and should be given the green light for
export.
The result has
been to confuse South Africa's message and diminish its resolve
to rein in Zanu-PF - Zuma's facilitation team reads them the riot
act, Shabangu offers them a tissue and sympathetic words of encouragement.
Shabangu's defence of
Zanu-PF's operations in Marange is also a selective interpretation
of the facts. A Kimberley Process review mission last August did
find evidence of some progress (notably a drop in state-sponsored
violence against artisanal miners and improvements in the internal
operations of two South African companies in joint-venture agreements
with the Zimbabwe government) but it was far from a clean bill of
health.
Military and police involvement
in mining syndicates and smuggling remain a serious problem. The
compliance of one of the joint ventures, Canadile, was also thrown
into doubt late last year after it imploded amid allegations of
corruption involving Mpofu and many of the company's directors.
Compounding matters were revelations by Tendai Biti, Zimbabwe's
finance minister, that as much as $300-million in diamond revenues
failed to make their way to government coffers in 2010.
Which brings us back
to efforts to regularise mining activity in Marange. One Zimbabwean
told Partnership Africa Canada during a recent visit there: "The
poachers are in charge of the zoo. Unless the Kimberley Process
gets serious with Zim, its reputation will be destroyed and the
entire African diamond trade will go down the toilet."
Unlike other
examples of rogue behaviour that the Kimberley Process has faced,
Marange is not just a matter of weak internal controls, corruption
or even violence in the diamond fields. Ultimately, it is a political
problem that demands a political answer. In this respect, the Kimberley
Process should not be the only, or even primary, vehicle to adjudicate
the issue. South Africa needs to step up its political engagement
with Zimbabwe over the matter. The parallels between the Kimberley
Process and SADC's long, frustrated experience with Zanu-PF are
instructive. Left to its own devices Zanu-PF will stall, obfuscate
and do business as usual.
South
Africa and SADC cannot ignore the tight link between Zanu-PF's political
behaviour and its control of Marange. South Africa cannot turn a
blind eye to the murky role its citizens are playing in Marange's
joint ventures and in smuggling. For Zuma, the stakes are high -
failing to accept these realities will derail his new-found activist
policy on Zimbabwe before it gets away from the station.
Alan Martin is the director
of research for Partnership Africa Canada, which undertakes research
and policy dialogue on natural resources, conflict, governance and
human rights. In 2003 it was co-nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize
for its work in exposing links between conflict and diamonds in
several African countries
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