When we choose to enter public life we lose a number of important things - our right to some forms of privacy, the right to say just what we want; we cannot speak anymore as a private citizen and our public has the right to hold us accountable. Just recently I have been speaking out on the issue of the Marange diamond discovery, in doing so I have been trying to disclose the facts about the discovery, one of the most remarkable diamond discoveries in the history of the industry, the facts surrounding their legal and operational status and the cost to us as a nation of the present situation.
The facts are not in dispute:
- They were discovered by De Beers Diamond Mining Company - the largest gemstone company in the world who allowed their rights to lapse;
- They were then registered legally by African Consolidated Resources whose legal rights have simply been swept aside by the Ministry of Mines;
- Since 2006 when commercial and informal exploitation began, several billion dollars worth of gemstones have been produced with production and sales now running at over $4 billion a year; and
The fields have been the subject of serious human and legal rights abuse, there has been no accountability or transparency in the States activities on site or those of their "partners" who represent shady interests and whose links to prominent Zanu PF and Military figures is shrouded in secrecy.
The Minister responsible, Mr. Obert Mpofu has reacted in an interesting way. At a recent Parliamentary budget workshop he walked up to me with a broad smile (we know each other well) and said he had nothing to hide and would be announcing major new initiatives on Marange. In his subsequent speech he stated that diamond sales "could" reach $2 billion in 2012 and said he was in discussion with the Minister of Finance about how to boost the revenues to the State. He attacked De Beers and made some outrageous allegations about their exploration activities on the site alleging that they had illegally been exporting diamonds from the field for years up to 2006.
He then went on to say that my proposal to nationalize the Marange diamond fields was nonsense; if we were to do that "Why not nationalize everything else - the platinum mines, Marowa Diamond Mine (Rio Tinto of London) and everything else". He has subsequently repeated this mantra on several occasions. Last week he went further when he attacked my position saying that nationalisation never worked, Parastatals were universally a mess and if the Marange Fields were nationalized they would not work. He also claimed that the resource was under the control of the State in that the Zimbabwe Mining Development Corporation was in control.