Last week Murisi Zwizwai, the MDC Deputy Minister of Mines and Mining Development, told a meeting of the Kimberley Process in Namibia there were no killings in the Chiadzwa diamond mining area. In spite of widespread accounts the official told the international scheme, that tries to curb the sale of 'blood diamonds,' that claims of massacres that took place in the diamond fields were a result of 'unsubstantiated reports'.
Zwizwai had told delegates at the Namibian conference: "Contrary to allegations in the media, nobody was killed by security forces during an operation at Marange, where about 30,000 people descended onto the alluvial mining field."
"These people comprised of cunning, die-hard illegal diamond diggers. This compelled government to conduct a special operation to flush out the illegal diamond miners and to bring order and sanity to the area."
The party called for a thorough investigation by the inclusive government and Parliament into the goings-on in Chiadzwa. "We believe that a thorough investigation will enable the inclusive government to come clean on what really transpired before senior government officials seek refuge in denial," the statement said.
Human rights groups have called for Zimbabwe's expulsion from the Kimberley Process, as a result of gross rights abuses that took place in Marange's diamond fields. The Zimbabwe Lawyers for Human Rights estimates that 5,000 people were arrested by soldiers, some of them tortured and there were even claims that scores of people were buried in mass graves 'to hide the regime's murderous activities.'
Most recently, Human Rights Watch issued a detailed report of ongoing abuses including hundreds of cases of child labour.
At the same time Marange MDC MP Shuah Mudiwa, who has been jailed for seven years, was reportedly ready to reveal the location of a mass grave site - where the victims of the massacre were allegedly buried.
In Wednesday's statement, the MDC said whatever happened at Chiadzwa remains shrouded in secrecy as there is 'no public information as to how much the country has accrued from the diamond fields where ordinary Zimbabweans were displaced to make way for politically-connected fat cats and politicians.'
The party reiterated that there are unconfirmed allegations of mass graves and massive looting which cannot be easily dismissed in the absence of an investigation.
We were not able to reach the Deputy Minister for a comment.







