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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
Zimbabwe-s wealth hijacked by evil parasites
Psychology Maziwisa
June 25, 2010
The very idea
that the diamonds
of Chiadzwa should be certified as clean is not only ironic
it is so unwarranted that it defies description, coming as it does
against the backdrop of cold-bloodied massacres and gross human
rights violations.
In 2008, when
the economic consequences of Mugabe-s misrule and oppression
became unbearable, thousands of Zimbabweans engaged in what could
rightly be described as a justified diamond rush.
To say the least,
the aftermath of that rush was totally reprehensible. The military
was instructed to move in and reports indicate that innocent Zimbabweans
were sprayed with bullets from AK47s and mauled by vicious dogs
as they were forcibly removed. This degree of force was unnecessary
and unjustified.
By all accounts
Chiadzwa is one of the biggest diamond finds of our lifetime. It
is a source of first-class gems capable of yielding, according to
expert data, close to US$2billion a year- certainly enough to ensure
the recovery of our economy and to rebuild our infrastructure to
world-class standards.
However, with
politics of patronage at the heart of Mugabe-s survival, the
entire discovery has now officially become a complete fiasco. What
should naturally benefit everyone in our country has been entirely
diverted to the enrichment of a favoured few, all of them self-interested
and evil parasites.
The embargo
on the sale of blood diamonds means that Chiadzwa gems are sold
on the black market, certainly for less than their true worth.
There is no
recognition that the nation-s mineral resources belong to
the people of Zimbabwe and that all Zimbabweans have a right to
benefit from exploiting them. One has only to look at neighbouring
Botswana to see how properly managed mining operations and sound
fiscal policy can lift a nation out of poverty.
Meanwhile,
in our country, poverty, hunger and disease loom large. Our infrastructure
lies in ruin, our hospitals have become hazardous if not altogether
complete death traps.
Money that
is desperately needed to alleviate the suffering of an entire nation
is pouring into the already fat pockets of a handful of toadies.
Everyone who
believes he has had a role to play in the perpetuation of Mugabe-s
stay in power apparently wants a piece of Chiadzwa. It has become
a 'you rub my back, I rub yours- affair. The military
and the police have bluntly demanded mining concessions. In what
other country of the world are the police and the military mining
magnates? It is unprecedented. It is outrageous. It is theft of
the highest order.
Mineral resources
are, by their very nature, finite. They are non-renewable and as
a nation we get just one chance to maximise our benefits from them.
Yet, by the looks of things, Mugabe-s men will only leave
Chiadzwa when there are no more diamonds to extract.
While the looting
exercise is underway, the message from Mugabe-s men is very
clear: disclose the human rights violations at Chiadzwa entirely
at your own peril. Farai Maguwu-s incarceration is a case
in point. The statute under which he was allegedly found wanting
serves no purpose other than to legalise what has become a devilish
trend to silence voices critical of Mugabe.
What is prejudicial
to the country is not what Farai Maguwu may or may not have communicated
to the KP Monitor, it is the looting of resources meant to benefit
a country in desperate need of economic resurgence.
It is the intimidation
by state agents of innocent Zimbabweans who find it within themselves
to say and do what is right for the benefit not of themselves but
the nation at large. It is when dictatorial impositions are considered
expedient and preferable to the democratic wishes of the majority
of the people.
Mugabe and
his crew must be made to acknowledge that Chiadzwa belongs to all
Zimbabweans and that any proceeds from this immense deposit should
benefit the country as a whole.
Until the benefits
of Chiadzwa accrue to the nation as a whole rather than to a bunch
of greedy individuals and human rights violations come to a complete
halt, any suggestion that the Chiadzwa diamonds should be certified
for sale on the international market is preposterous.
Psychology
Maziwisa is Interim President of the Union for Sustainable Democracy
(USD) and can be contacted at leader@usd.org.zw
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