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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
Kimberley
Process: Demand end to abuses in diamond trade
Human
Rights Watch (HRW)
November 01, 2010
http://www.hrw.org/en/news/2010/10/29/kimberley-process-demand-end-abuses-diamond-trade
The Kimberley
Process Certification Scheme should not allow further exports from
the Marange diamond fields in Zimbabwe until the government makes
clear progress in ending abuses and smuggling, Human Rights Watch
said today. Participants in the scheme, an international body that
oversees the diamond trade, are scheduled to meet in Jerusalem from
November 1 to 4, 2010.
Human Rights
Watch research from July through September established that large
parts of the fields remain under the control of the Zimbabwe Defence
Forces soldiers, who harass and intimidate the local community and
engage in widespread diamond smuggling.
In November
2009, the government of Zimbabwe and the Kimberley Process agreed
to a joint work plan, in which Zimbabwe committed to a phased withdrawal
of the armed forces from the diamond fields, and for a monitor to
examine and certify that all shipments of diamonds from Marange
met Kimberley Process standards.
"The government
made a lot of promises, but soldiers still control most diamond
fields and are involved in illicit mining and smuggling," said
Rona Peligal, Africa director at Human Rights Watch. "Zimbabwe
should mine its diamonds without relying on an abusive military
that preys on the local population."
Human Rights
Watch has repeatedly called on Kimberley Process members to address
human rights abuses in Marange and recognize human rights issues
as a fundamental element of the Kimberley Process Certification
Scheme mandate.
At a special
meeting in St Petersburg, Russia, in July, Kimberley Process members
agreed to permit Zimbabwe to export two shipments of diamonds under
supervision of the body's monitors, on condition that the body would
investigate conditions in the Marange fields. The agreement also
tied all future exports of diamonds to clear and measurable progress
in ending smuggling and abuses, and allowed for local civil society
groups to participate in monitoring progress in the fields.
Human Rights
Watch learned that the Kimberley Process team sent in to review
conditions in the fields in August was routinely obstructed by government
officials from conducting its activities and was unable to gather
crucial information about conditions in the majority of diamond
fields.
In recent investigations
in Zimbabwe, Human Rights Watch researchers found that while violence
had decreased in the fields, the army and police continued to commit
abuses, which put Zimbabwe in violation of the minimum standards
required for membership in the Kimberley Process:
- The Zimbabwean
army uses syndicates of local miners to extract diamonds. Local
miners told Human Rights Watch that the army coercively recruits
local people to help the army dig for diamonds. Many people are
afraid to refuse, fearing that the soldiers will beat and harass
them.
- In July,
a scuffle between police, soldiers, and local miners ended in
the death of a miner, who was hit over the head with an iron bar
by a policeman. There has been no investigation into the miner's
death.
- Widespread
smuggling of Marange diamonds has not ended. Scores of buyers
and middlemen openly trade in Marange diamonds in the small Mozambican
town of Vila de Manica, 20 miles from Mutare.
"The Kimberley
Process should not allow the export of further shipments of diamonds
from Marange until there is meaningful progress to end smuggling
and abuses by the army," Peligal said. "Without these
kinds of reforms, international consumers risk purchasing 'blood
diamonds.'"
Certain portions
of the fields are being mined by private firms with clear connections
to members of the former ruling party, the Zimbabwe African National
Union Patriotic Front (ZANU-PF) and the military, which continues
to engage in smuggling in the fields.
With elections
proposed for 2011, reports of ZANU-PF and military involvement in
diamond mining raise serious concerns that revenue from the diamonds
will be used to fund political violence ahead of the elections,
Human Rights Watch said.
"Revenue
from Marange should benefit the people of Zimbabwe, not finance
political violence," Peligal said.
The Kimberly
Process Certification Scheme consists of governments and observers
from the diamond industry, and nongovernmental organizations, who
meet once a year to discuss the implementation of the scheme.
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