|
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
Military
ignores threat of diamond trade suspension
IRIN News
August 26, 2009
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?ReportID=85875
The militarization
of Zimbabwe's diamond fields is still a fact of life, despite a
report
by the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS) - an international
initiative to stem the flow of conflict diamonds - citing the presence
of soldiers as a major concern that could lead to the country's
suspension from the global diamond trade.
The KPCS interim report
recommending Zimbabwe's six-month suspension from importing and
exporting rough diamonds was leaked to the media in July 2009, but
the suspension is only expected to be enacted in November 2009 at
the annual plenary meeting of the organization in the Namibian capital,
Windhoek - although this is not a foregone conclusion.
The interim report called
for the "immediate demilitarization of the Marange fields [of
which Chiadzwa is part] and a comprehensive investigation of the
role of the Zimbabwe National Army, Zimbabwe Republic Police, and
other officials in abuses in the Marange diamond operation."
An IRIN correspondent
who visited the area this week said access to the Chiadzwa diamond
fields, in the eastern province of Manicaland, was blocked by armed
soldiers and police, and there were frequent roadblocks in the area.
"Armed soldiers
and police details, some mounted on horses and others with vicious
dogs, continue to terrorise the villagers. They [the security forces]
were on their best behaviour during the KPCS visit, but went on
to unleash more terror on local people," a teacher who declined
to be identified told IRIN.
The IRIN correspondent
was subjected to both vehicle and body searches by security personnel
at numerous roadblocks in the province, and saw what appeared to
be new earthmoving equipment en route to the diamond fields.
"The situation on
the ground [in Chiadzwa] is of great concern," said Annie Dunnebacke,
a campaigner for Global Witness, a UK-based NGO that seeks to prevent
the use of natural resources to fuel conflict, and a prime mover
in setting up the KPCS.
It has been ten months
since human rights abuses were exposed in the Chiadzwa diamond fields.
"In spite of global attention, evidence of human rights abuses
and the facilitation of [diamond] smuggling by the [Zimbabwean]
military ... the Kimberley process is hiding behind the excuse of
procedure."
Dunnebacke told IRIN
that Zimbabwe's disregard for the KPCS was "sending a bad message"
that "the international agreement has rules, but no consequences
for those that don't follow the rules."
Andrew Bone, Director
of International Relations at De Beers, told IRIN: "The [diamond]
industry is eagerly awaiting the Kimberley Process final report,
and just as eagerly the findings and recommendations of it, and
that any and all of the recommendations are carried out in a timely
fashion."
The KPSC final report
on Zimbabwe's diamond trade, although not yet completed, is expected
to be presented at the Windhoek plenary meeting, but according to
those familiar with the process, the findings in final reports rarely
differ from those in interim reports.
The KPCS relies on governments,
the diamond industry and concerned NGOs to prevent the trade in
conflict diamonds, also known as "blood diamonds", which
are often mined with scant regard for the human rights of the miners,
and have overwhelmingly been used to fund conflicts, especially
in underdeveloped countries.
Politicising
the diamond agreement
However, a visit
to Zimbabwe by the current KPCS chair, Namibia's Deputy Minister
of Mines and Energy, Bernard Esau, under the auspices of the organization
but without the consent or prior knowledge of other partners, angered
NGOs as well as several governments party to the international agreement.
Esau visited Zimbabwe
soon after the KPCS announced it would investigate allegations of
human rights abuses in the Chiadzwa diamond fields, which observers
said "politicized" the international conflict diamond
agreement.
Zimbabwean President
Robert Mugabe's ZANU-PF party and Namibia's South West African People's
Organisation (SWAPO) government forged close ties during their respective
struggles for independence, and their armies fought side by side
during a recent conflict in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
"Under the Kimberley
Process Certification Scheme, conflict diamonds are rough diamonds
used by rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict armies
at undermining legitimate governments ... There is no armed conflict
or any involvement of a rebel army or movement in Zimbabwe; therefore
Marange diamonds do not fall within KPCS definition of conflict
diamonds," Esau told local media.
Arrests
in the wake of the fact finding mission
After publication
of the interim report calling for the six-month suspension of Zimbabwe
from the world's diamond trade, a local chief in the Chiadzwa diamond
fields, who said he had assisted the KPSC fact-finding mission,
was arrested.
Chief Newman Chiadzwa
was charged with the unlawful possession of 8.61kg of diamonds,
under the Precious Stones Trade Act, in the Mutare magistrate's
court on 20 August.
According to "investigations"
by the Herald, a state-controlled daily newspaper, "Newman
Chiadzwa ... is posing as Chief Chiadzwa" and was an "illegal
diamond dealer".
The Herald said, "Newman
was neither a chief nor a headman of the area in which the diamond
fields are situated", and that family members had told the
newspaper "he [Newman] was a problem in the family, and was
actively working for Zimbabwe's suspension from international diamond
trading."
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
|