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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
Military
sustains grip on diamond fields
Human Rights Watch
August 06, 2009
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2009/08/06/zimbabwe-military-sustains-grip-diamond-fields
Zimbabwe has failed to
remove its armed forces from the diamond fields in Marange and to
end related human rights abuses there, Human Rights Watch said today.
As a result, the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS) should
suspend Zimbabwe immediately.
The KPCS, an international
group governing the global diamond industry, sent a review mission
to Marange in late June 2009 to assess Zimbabwe's compliance with
the group's standards, which require diamonds to be lawfully mined,
documented, and exported by participant countries. On July 4, local
and international media reported that the review team had found
Zimbabwe to be in violation of these standards. The KPCS urged the
government to take corrective action by July 20 or face suspension.
"Not only has Zimbabwe
refused to move the military out of Marange, but it has rotated
new units in," said Georgette Gagnon, Africa director at Human
Rights Watch. "The human rights abuses and smuggling are continuing,
and witnesses to earlier abuses are being harassed and threatened."
Despite indications in
early July by Zimbabwe's mines minister, Obert Mpofu, that units
of the Zimbabwe Defence Forces (ZDF) would be removed from Marange,
they instead have consolidated their presence. In a public statement
on July 10, senior Zimbabwe army and police officials declared that
they would not leave the diamond fields. Human Rights Watch has
evidence that three days later, the military rotated its Kwekwe-based
fifth brigade into Marange to replace the Mutare-based third brigade.
Human Rights Watch has
also received disturbing reports that a key local witness who gave
evidence of abuses to the Kimberly Process review mission, Chief
Newman Chiadzwa, went into hiding after menacing actions by members
of the army, including death threats and threats of eviction from
his home. Human Rights Watch called on the Zimbabwe authorities
to end immediately the harassment of Chiadzwa and any others who
gave evidence to the review mission. It also urged the Kimberley
Process mission leader to send an equally strong message to the
Zimbabwe government to end its intimidation of witnesses to abuses.
In a June 26
report, Diamonds
in the Rough: Human Rights Abuses in the Marange Diamond Fields
of Zimbabwe, Human Rights Watch documented how Zimbabwe's army
had committed horrific abuses against miners and local residents,
including killings, beatings, and torture. Such abuses are continuing.
The military remains under the control of Zimbabwe African National
Union - Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF), the former ruling party, which
now notionally shares power in the government with the Movement
for Democratic Change (MDC). Human Rights Watch's report also showed
how the policy of rotating military units into the diamond fields
was designed to maintain the loyalty of senior military and other
officials to ZANU-PF by giving them illicit access to Zimbabwe's
mineral wealth at a time of national economic and political crisis.
After concluding its
investigation in Marange, the 10-member Kimberley Process review
team presented an interim report to government on July 21. This
report has not yet been made public.
"The Kimberley Process
took an important first step in condemning government conduct in
Marange," said Gagnon. "Faced with evidence that Zimbabwe
is ignoring its concerns, it should publish the review mission report.
Then it should take the next logical step, and suspend Zimbabwe.
Zimbabwe is clearly not going to take the necessary corrective actions
on its own."
While the review mission
recommended in its interim report that Zimbabwe be suspended from
the Kimberly Process, the final decision on that action lies with
KPCS members, who work on the basis of consensus and contribute
to the mission's final report. A suspension would include a ban
on Marange diamonds, a conclusion the government has fought to avoid.
Human Rights Watch again
called on the Kimberly Process to set up a local monitoring mechanism
comprising local civil society organizations and Marange community
leaders, who would independently monitor and verify the government's
compliance with the Kimberly recommendations and ensure that those
responsible for abuses are held to account.
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