www.sarwatch.org

Friday
Mar 12th
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Home Headline news for Namibia Namibia: 'Zim Diamonds Not Blood Diamonds'

Namibia: 'Zim Diamonds Not Blood Diamonds'

E-mail Print PDF

THE Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS) today begins a review mission to Zimbabwe amidst calls from international organisations to ensure that trade in diamonds is not being done at the expense of human rights.

In a speech that seemed to attempt to clear the negative profile that Zimbabwe's Marange diamond deposits have received since they were discovered in 2006, with reports of mass violence, uncalled-for killings and mass graves at the hands of the Mugabe government's security forces, Zwizwai told the meeting that "there was no one killed by the security forces" in the Marange alluvial diamond fields.

Zwizwai said this compelled the government to "direct security forces to conduct a special operation to flush out the illegal diamond miners to bring order and sanity in the area".

"Contrary to allegations by various sections in the local and international media, there was no one killed by the security forces during the operation," Zwizwai said, stating that the operation was "successful" and that deaths and arrests reported were a result of skirmishes among the illegal miners themselves.

"The government has in a way crushed illegal panning in the Marange diamond fields, so that they could manipulate the resources," says Farai Maguwu, Director of the Centre for Research and Development in Mutare, Zimbabwe.

Maguwu, who along with other human rights activists held a press conference at the National Society for Human Rights on Friday, says that at least 300 people were murdered in the Marange fields between November 2008 and April this year.

The Deputy Minister told the meeting that "the government of Zimbabwe has never at any one time used the Marange diamond, or any diamond for that matter, to fund the alleged human rights abuse. Zimbabwean diamonds are not blood diamonds. According to the Kimberley Process conflict diamonds are diamonds used by rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict aimed at undermining legitimate governments. There is no armed conflict in Zimbabwe."

But the human rights activists say that if this is the narrow definition by with the KP defines conflict diamonds, this definition needs to be changed.

"The Marange diamonds are being used to fuel conflict. Testimonies show that that there is a clear conflict between ordinary citizens and security forces, and what is lamentable is that a national resource is being used to serve the interests of a few. We also don't know where the diamonds are going and what it is being used for, but we see the issues, and the people's rights being violated. We see the army being used to suppress the people, and in this way, to prop up a repressive government," says human rights lawyer Trust Maanda.

The review mission, which starts today, will not focus so much on the human rights abuses that the government is accused of perpetrating, but on whether the KP's processes are being properly implemented in Zimbabwe, leaving several NGOs wondering whether the Kimberley Process is fully exercising its mandate.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment
quote
bold
italicize
underline
strike
url
image
quote
quote
smaller | bigger

security code
Write the displayed characters


busy
 

Translate

English French German Italian Portuguese Russian Spanish