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CloseLinkedinDiggMixxMySpaceYahoo! BuzzPermalink By CELIA W. DUGGER
Published: July 7, 2009
JOHANNESBURG â A team assessing Zimbabweâs compliance with international standards to prevent the diamond trade from fueling conflict found that the nationâs military had been directly involved in illegal mining and that the authorities had carried out âhorrific violence against civilians,â according to a memo the team gave to Zimbabwean officials. louis vuitton bag
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Times Topics: ZimbabweThe team, sent on a mission to Zimbabwe last week under the Kimberly Process, an international undertaking to halt the trade in so-called blood diamonds, said its recommendations could include the full suspension of Zimbabwe from the process, further complicating the countryâs ability to sell its diamonds on international markets. Already, the World Federation of Diamond Bourses has recommended that its members in 20 countries not trade diamonds from the Marange deposits in eastern Zimbabwe because of reports of abuses.
In his confidential memo, the teamâs leader, A. Kpandel Fayia, told Zimbabwean officials that he was so disturbed by the testimonies of victims the team met that he had to leave as they spoke.
âOur team was able to interview and document the stories of tens of victims, observe their wounds, scars from dog bites and batons, tears, and ongoing psychological trauma,â said the memo by Mr. Fayia, a deputy minister of the ministry that oversees mining in Liberia. âI am from Liberia, sir; I was in Liberia throughout the 15 years of civil war, and I have experienced too much senseless violence in my lifetime, especially connected to diamonds.â He told them, âThis has to be acknowledged and it has to stop.â
The memo was provided to The New York Times by a person with knowledge of the proceedings, and confirmed by two others, including one who attended the teamâs briefing with officials.
The government officials, who have adamantly denied any state-sponsored violence in the diamond fields, told the state-owned newspaper that they would try to comply with the Kimberly Process before the team issued its final report. Zimbabweâs deputy mining minister, Murisi Zwizwai, was quoted as saying after Mr. Fayiaâs presentation that Zimbabwe had agreed to remove soldiers from the fields âin phases while proper security settings would be put in place.â
The Kimberly team, which included Liberian, American and Namibian officials, as well as representatives of the diamond industry and civic groups, told Zimbabwean officials that they should suspend mining in the Marange fields, demilitarize the operation and investigate the role of the military and the police.
It is hard to predict what the government will do. President Robert Mugabe, 85, is deeply hostile to Western nations and international nongovernmental organizations pressing him to restore the rule of law.
After meeting the most senior American diplomat for Africa, Johnnie Carson, on Sunday on the sidelines of the African Union summit meeting in Libya, Mr. Mugabe angrily called Mr. Carson, a former ambassador to Zimbabwe, âan idiot.â
âYou have the likes of little fellows like Carson, you see, wanting to say, âYou do this, you do that,â Mr. Mugabe was quoted as saying Monday in The Herald, the state-owned daily. âWho is he? I hope he was not speaking for Obama. I told him he was a shame, a great shame, being an African-American.â
Mr. Mugabe has sought to use his control of the countryâs only daily newspaper to shape public awareness.
Its story Friday was headlined, âKimberly team dismisses negative reports,â and offered quotes from Mr. Fayia that suggested Zimbabwe was getting illegal mining under control. It included no hint that the team was finding serious human rights abuses.
Just days before the mission left for Zimbabwe, Human Rights Watch issued a report accusing the military of violently seizing the Marange diamond fields last year, then organizing syndicates of miners and smuggling the diamonds out of the country.
Some of the people who met with the Kimberly team described in interviews what they told its members â and what they never got the chance to relate. A man who pleaded not to be quoted by name for fear he would be killed said he witnessed the burial of 85 people in a mass grave who had been killed in the Marange diamond fields. He offered to take the team to the grave site, he said, but was told they were out of time.
Brian James, the mayor of Mutare, brought two miners from a remote area whom he said were shot during the militaryâs operation in the Marange fields. But by the time their turn came to testify, Mr. James said, âThey felt they were quite traumatized by what they had seen and heard. Seeing more people wasnât going to make any difference.â