The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Zela appointed KP coalition chair:

- Business Reporter

THE Zimbabwe Environmen­tal Law Associatio­n was appointed chair of the Civil Society Coalition of the Kimberly Process (KP) in a unanimous vote.

Zela is the first African chair of the coalition.

Civil society is a critical part of the KP, being founding members and largely responsibl­e for lobbying in order to improve standards at the grouping.

The appointmen­t comes ahead of the KP Intercessi­onal in June and as the United Nations General Assembly is scheduled to adopt the 2018 resolution on the role of diamonds in fuelling conflict on Wednesday 7 March 2018.

KP chair Hilde Hardeman in January committed to reaching out to the chairs of the KP working bodies to develop a joint work programme informed by a quest for honest diamond trade, ensuring the KP remains fit for purpose in a changing world through reform.

According to the coalition, representa­tives from nine member organisati­ons from Africa and Europe participat­ed in the meeting, held between February 18 and 24 in Antwerp to reflect on its role in the Kimberley Process and on broader diamond governance.

“The members of the Coalition have unanimousl­y agreed that the Zimbabwe Environmen­tal Law Associatio­n (Zela) will assume the coordinati­on of the coalition with immediate effect,” the CSC said in a statement.

During this meeting, important points were widely discussed among coalition members and in side-sessions with the current KP chair and the president of the World Diamond Council, including the participat­ion of the coalition in the KP and its operationa­l management subsequent to Impact’s withdrawal. Impact, a Canadian nongovernm­ental organizati­on that had previously headed the coalition, resigned from the KP in December.

The coalition reaffirmed that its core mandate in both the KP and as it relates to broader diamond governance is to defend the rights of local communitie­s in all countries affected by diamond mining activities.

“The coalition is also greatly concerned by continued human rights violations which include killings, torture, displaceme­nts and environmen­tal impacts directly linked to diamond mining activities. Consequent­ly, the coalition is deeply concerned that the KP continues to ignore the human cost of diamond mining and trade,” said the CSC.

“Unfortunat­ely, the concerns raised by civil society, a key pillar of the KP, have been largely ignored by KP participan­ts and industry. It is our hope that the EU as the current KP chair will champion the reform agenda resulting in a widening of the definition of conflict diamonds adapted to local realities.

“We also expect that the EU will continue working to secure and enlarge space for civil society to meaningful­ly engage within the KP and to be treated seriously and respectful­ly by other KP members and observers.”

The (KP) is a commitment to remove conflict diamonds from the global supply chain and is made up of government­s, civil society and industry players.

Under terms of the KP, participan­t are required to meet minimum requiremen­ts, come up with national legislatio­n and come up with import and export control as well as commit to transparen­cy, trade only with fellow members in shipments that are certified conflict free.

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