'Blackout towns' named

A leaked document shows that a number of municipalities are not paying their Eskom accounts and may end up without electricity.

Old Gs never die

Leave the grandstanding to the G20 - the G7 is where the real talking gets done, says CNN International Correspondent Richard Quest.
Where am I? Fin24.com  > Economy

Zim forces leave diamond fields

Nov 19 2009 12:30

Harare - Zimbabwean security forces have started withdrawing from the country's eastern diamond fields to meet Kimberley Process reforms over human rights abuses, a report said Thursday.

Mines Minister Obert Mpofu said Zimbabwe had complied with more than 90 percent of the requirements set by the global watchdog Kimberley Process Certification Scheme which monitors trade in conflict diamonds.

"We have done a lot since the last review by the KPCS as part of our efforts to comply with their recommendations as well as towards achieving and fulfilling compliance," the state-run Herald quoted Mpofu as saying.

"As is evident at these fields, there are no army officers or police details," he said during a government tour on Wednesday. Early this month, Zimbabwe escaped a temporary Kimberley ban despite calls for the country to be suspended and the scheme's own citation of "unacceptable and horrific violence against civilians by authorities" in Marange.

The global scheme gave Zimbabwe a June 2010 deadline to implement a work-plan and address compliance to the scheme, rejecting its own recommendation made four months ago that Harare face a six-month suspension.

The withdrawal of the army and police comes at a time when the government has licensed two South African firms to operate in Chiadzwa where the fields are situated.

A representative for the investors said 200 private security guards had replaced the security officials.

"We are taking control of all areas that we have claimed but still working with state security agents in areas where we are still exploring. But they will move as soon as we have secured those areas," Dave Kassel was quoted as saying in the Herald.

- Sapa

 

Add your comment

(No bad language or hate speech, please)

    

 
Your name  
Email  
Comment
(500 characters remaining)
 

 
Please enter the text below(Case sensitive)
 
 
If you can see the following field, please ignore it, as it is used to verify that you are human.

 
  Disclaimer

Fin24.com encourages freedom of speech and the expression of diverse views. The views of users published on Fin24.com are therefore their own and do not represent the views of Fin24.com. All posts are monitored by Fin24.com's editors and grossly derogatory posts will be deleted. The Fin24.com editorial team will delete your comment should you post abusive comments, use vulgar language or make discriminatory observations.

Company Snapshot

Video

5 questions with John Munro
2010/02/08 05:25:00 PM

Fin24.com spoke to the Rand Uranium CEO at the 2010 Mining Indaba about the company's planned R3.5bn plant. Time: 2:08

Search engine friendly content

Blogs

Podcasts