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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


  • Interim report to the Working Group on Monitoring and Kimberly Process Chair
    Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS)
    July 15, 2009

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    Background

    Pursuant to the Mandate established by the Working Group on Monitoring ("WGM"), a team of 10 individuals -- representing 5 Participant governments, 1 Regional Economic Integration Organization, the World Diamond Council, and civil society ("the Team") - conducted a Review Mission to Zimbabwe from 30 June - 4 July, 2009. Liberia, represented by A. Kpandel Fayia, Deputy Minister for Planning and Development in the Ministry of Lands, Mines, and Energy, served as Chair of the Review Mission.

    The Team, in conjunction with the Government of Zimbabwe, established an ambitious program to cover the full range of issues set forth in the Mandate, which focused on overall compliance by Zimbabwe with the minimum requirements of the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme ("KPCS"), as well as particular assessment of the situation in and around the Marange diamond fields, located in the Chiadzwa region. The Team spent two days conducting meetings and interviews in each of Harare and Chiadzwa/Mutare (city closest to Chiadzwa); the Team also spent one day visiting both the Murowa and River Ranch mines.

    The Team received complete cooperation from the Government of Zimbabwe, and all requests for meetings were granted, including with MP Shuah Mudiwa, whom the Team met in a prison in Mutare. In addition, all conditions established by the Team for certain meetings, e.g. that there be no representatives present from the Government, were respected. Further, the Team received verbal assurances that there would be no consequences for anyone who met with, or otherwise provided information to, the Team.

    The Team is in the process of preparing its complete report but concluded that an interim update to the WGM and KP Chair was appropriate and necessary, given the volume of information, procedural requirements for a final report, and the urgency of -- and attention given by the international community to -- the situation.

    In sum, the Team assesses that, although certain operations and processes appear to continue to function in a manner consistent with KPCS minimum requirements, there are serious indications of non-compliance with the KPCS in a number of areas, primarily related to the situation at Marange but also including some of the procedures used by the Minerals Marketing Corporation of Zimbabwe ("MMCZ"). Although the Team reviewed and took note of a wide array of information prior to the Review Mission, the indications of non-compliance identified are substantiated by direct evidence that the Team gathered during the mission.

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