Does Zimbabwe Qualify for Acceptance by the Kimberly Process?
When I asked the Minister of Mines to declare to the Parliament of Zimbabwe the production and sales of diamonds from the Marange Diamond fields over the past 5 years he reported on the 27th July that these had reached over 11 million carats and had been worth just over US$200 million, of which US$174 million had been paid to the Treasury.
As these numbers were so patently false, I set out to find out for myself, just what the situation actually was. After three months of investigation I came to the conclusion that production and sales from Marange in 2010 had been worth up to US$4 billion and that the figures given to the House of Assembly represented just 5 per cent of that and that this was for 5 years production and sales!
I discovered that not only had the Minister failed to declare the number of carats actually mined but also that he had understated their value which had actually been nearly $70 a carat instead of $18.
When these facts were presented to the House in the subsequent debate, no-one inside the House or outside questioned my estimates. They attacked the proposal that we nationalise the diamond fields to gain control and to achieve transparency and accountability, they attacked the allegations of gross human rights abuse, but no-one, attacked the estimates.
In fact, last week at a pre budget workshop for Parliamentarians, the Minister admitted that production and sales could reach $2 billion a year, admitting for the first time the scope and size of real production and sales. This compares to the figures he gave in an earlier workshop which were quoted by a fellow Member of Parliament as being up to 600 000 carats a day. ACR gave a figure of 160 000 carats purchased in one day on the site in 2006 from vendors on the side of the road.