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Violence Limiting CAR Diamond Exports
Oct 25, 2018 4:11 AM
By Leah Meirovich
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RAPAPORT... Continued violence in the Central African Republic (CAR) is
making it impossible for the nation to develop its diamond sector, according to the World Diamond
Council (WDC).
A massacre in Bria left 30 people dead last week — the
latest in a string of fatal incidents in the eastern region, which is currently
prohibited from exporting rough under the Kimberley Process (KP).
While increasing the number of “green zones” —
areas the KP has deemed compliant with its regulations — is essential for the sector
to generate more revenue, that can only happen if those areas of the country cooperate with
the KP, said Stephane Fischler, president of the WDC, which represents the
industry at the KP.
“[The government would need to meet] criteria related to assuring
human security and free access,” Fischler added. “Only once these criteria are
met can the KP monitoring team consider new authorized zones of extraction.”
Two groups are fighting for control of locations where they
can levy taxes, including mining sites, UN sources told Rapaport News Tuesday.
Though the incidents are violent, the recent fighting is not unusual by the
country’s standards, the source added.
“The violence…is unfortunately systemic and is located in
the eastern part of the country, where all the diamond zones are banned for
exports by the KP,” said Fischler.
In 2013, the KP suspended CAR, banning it from exporting
rough diamonds after rebels took over the nation’s government. After carefully
monitored changes were put in place, portions of CAR were readmitted to the KP
in 2016. Only the green zone regions in the west — including Berberati, Boda, Nola,
Carnot and Gadzi — may export rough.
Some non-governmental organizations, including Global Witness and
Human Rights Watch, have opposed CAR’s readmittance, claiming groups are still
smuggling diamonds out of the country and bypassing human-rights concerns.
“The difficulty is that the CAR government has a very weak
capacity to pacify its whole territory,” Fischler said.
However, he noted, the trouble in the east is not a cause
for concern for those areas currently adhering to KP rules, as the governing body
has a strict monitoring system in place to ensure traceability of all rough
diamonds mined in the green zones.
“While [the violence] is a huge concern…for the CAR government,
Bria is very far away from the green zones,” said Peter Meeus, an adviser to
the CAR government on the diamond industry. “It’s a huge country. Current KP
protocols are very stringent as to make sure [conflict] diamonds cannot be
mixed into diamonds from green zones,” added Meeus, who formerly headed the
Antwerp World Diamond Centre and the Dubai Diamond Exchange.
CAR’s status in the KP would only come under concern if the
violence occurred in approved areas, said Fischler.
“Systemic violence in the green zone would affect their current
status,” he observed. “Violence that would be reported by the UN observers on
the ground to the monitoring team.”
Image: Person inspecting rough diamonds. (Shutterstock)
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Tags:
car, Central African Republic, Global Witness, green zone, Human Rights Watch, Kimberley Process, KP, Leah Meirovich, Peter Meeus, Rapaport News, Stephane Fischler, WDC, World Diamond Council
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