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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
Is
Zim any better with diamonds
Charles
Laiton, NewsDay
October 18, 2011
http://www.newsday.co.zw/article/2011-10-18-is-zim-any-better-with-diamonds
Zimbabwe-s
economy does not seem to be changing for the better despite the
discovery of precious gems - diamonds - which many thought, would
have by now catapulted the country-s economy to greater heights
and created thousands of jobs for unemployed youths.
Five years after
the discovery of diamonds
in Marange, the country-s future does not look as bright
as initially thought.
The questions
many Zimbabweans are asking today are: How many carats of diamonds
have been mined to date and where have these precious gems been
taken to?
Braitwood Institute
of Gemology director Bernard Mutanga whose company is into rough
diamond cutting and polishing, lamented the failure by the government
to allow many colleges to train locals in diamonds.
"There
is no college that is offering courses in diamond cutting and polishing
at the moment and the country is losing a lot of revenue because
no value addition is being done to our diamonds," Mutanga
said.
Finance Minister
Tendai Biti in his Mid-Term
Budget Review statement said: "Wherever rough diamonds
exist and are not managed transparently and openly, they become
a major source of suspicion, conflict and national dislocation.
There are times
when resources, instead of being a blessing, can become a curse."
Biti said local diamonds continue to be curtailed by problems associated
with the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme as well as internal
issues of transparency and accountability.
"The reality
of Zimbabwe-s situation is that there is no connection between
Zimbabwe-s income from diamonds, its output and international
prices," he added.
The minister
also said between January and June 2011, the country exported 716
958,50 carats from its alluvial diamond mines in Marange.
However, Biti
said, during the first half of 2011, only $103,9 million of diamond
export shipments was accounted for and despite the huge production
at Marange, no payment has been received by Treasury for income
earned between January and June 2011.
"It is
therefore, imperative and urgent that the government concludes its
work on the Diamond Revenue Bill. This Bill will create a proper
legal framework dealing with the audit trail of all diamond revenue,
its sharing and distribution, as well as Zimra (Zimbabwe Revenue
Authority) at both production and marketing levels," Biti
said.
Core-mining
and mineral resources director, Lovemore Kurotwi, who is also shareholder
in Zimbabwe Diamond Education College, was reluctant to comment
on what was being done to local gems.
"If you
want to know more about what is happening with diamonds in Zimbabwe,
Minister of Mines Obert Mpofu would know better. My company is not
doing anything as of now and the college is yet to get the licence
to buy rough diamonds for practical lessons. We, however, hope to
get the licence soon so that we can begin operating," Kurotwi
said.
Many Zimbabweans
seem not to understand who is actually benefiting from the proceeds
from the gems.
Many would have
thought creating a diamond centre where all companies dealing with
the precious gem would be working, would be a major breakthrough
in ensuring transparency and accountability.
Analysts argue
that just a few individuals in the government positions are aware
of what is happening to the precious gems, but the whole nation
is in the dark.
"The government
is on record in trying to promote 'black empowerment-,
but it seems when it comes to natural resources that are supposed
to benefit the nation, the opposite is true and the concept becomes
'politician empowerment-," said an analyst.
"Zimbabwe
would benefit if more people were trained in adding value to the
diamonds. This will also create jobs for our unemployed youths."
Non-diamond
producing countries such as Belgium, Israel, India and many others
are benefiting more than Zimbabwe because of the way their diamond
industries are managed.
India employs
more than a million people in the diamond industry.
"Diamond
industry has its down and upstream benefits in any country as it
creates employment starting from mining, cutting, polishing and
jewelry making. Many other sectors such as insurance, transport,
banks, clothing industries and agriculture also benefit from people
employed in the diamond industries," an analyst added.
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