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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
Global
Witness leaves Kimberley Process diamond scheme
Theo Leggett,
BBC News
December 05, 2011
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/business-16027011
The campaign group Global
Witness says it is leaving the Kimberley Process, an international
scheme designed to stop the trade in so-called blood diamonds.
The Process was established
in 2003, amid concerns that diamond sales were funding conflicts
in African countries such as Angola and Sierra Leone.
It required all rough
diamonds sold internationally to be certified.
But Global Witness says
the Kimberley Process has failed to break the link between diamond
sales and violence.
In the late 1990s, the
organisation led a campaign to draw attention to the problem of
conflict diamonds, and along with other NGOs was instrumental in
setting up the Kimberley Process itself.
Now, however, it has
become disillusioned with the system.
"Nearly nine years
after the Kimberley Process was launched, the sad truth is that
most consumers still cannot be sure where their diamonds come from",
Global Witness founding director Charmian Gooch told BBC World Service's
World Business Report.
"The scheme has
failed three tests," she says.
"It failed to deal
with the trade in conflict diamonds from Ivory Coast, was unwilling
to take serious action in the face of blatant breaches of the rules
over a number of years by Venezuela and has proved unwilling to
stop diamonds fuelling corruption and violence in Zimbabwe."
Human rights groups have
been expressing concerns about the system for some time. But recent
decisions regarding Zimbabwe appear to have brought them to a head.
In November,
the Kimberley Process formally agreed to allow two companies to
export diamonds from Zimbabwe's Marange
diamond field.
That decision came despite
claims from both Human Rights Watch and Global Witness that the
Zimbabwean army has been involved in human rights abuses in the
mining areas.
It has also been suggested
that funds from diamond sales might be used to fund orchestrated
violence and intimidation of voters in the run-up to elections next
year.
"The Kimberley Process's
refusal to confront this reality is an outrage," says Ms Gooch.
"Consumers should
not buy Marange diamonds, and industry should not supply them."
The EU and US
had blocked previous attempts to lift the ban.
It was imposed
in 2009 following allegations that Zimbabwean military officers
had a stake in the industry.
But last month, Europe's
foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said the EU supported the
lifting of the ban because of "a renewed commitment by Zimbabwe
to address outstanding areas of noncompliance".
Human rights groups also
claimed that people were forced to work on the mines and some of
them were badly assaulted.
The authorities in Zimbabwe
have consistently denied the allegations.
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