From: as on
MPs still barred from visiting Chiadzwa

http://www.swradioafrica.com/

By Alex Bell
09 August 2010

A parliamentary Mines and Energy team has slammed the Mines Ministry
for
barring them from visiting the Chiadzwa diamond fields, where reports
of
human rights abuses still surface.

The ministry has stopped the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee from
touring
the diamond fields twice in the last few months, despite insisting that
conditions at the fields have improved. In a statement issued after the
first visit was stopped in March, the committee said it was in the
"interest
of the nation" for it to tour Chiadzwa and report its findings back to
Parliament.

"It is the committee's stand that the relevant authorities should
uphold the
principle of separation of powers and cooperate with Parliament in
facilitating the granting of the clearance and allowing the committee
to
exercise its oversight responsibilities, so that it can compile and
table
its findings in Parliament without further delay, in the interest of
the
nation," said the committee.

Chiredzi West MP Moses Mare said the move to bar them from touring
Chiadzwa
was "baffling" and in violation of their constitutional mandate of
overseeing events in the sector. Mare was quoted as saying that
suspicion of
illicit dealings in diamond sector would continue, as long as they
remained
barred from touring the Chiadzwa site.

"The portfolio committee has become irrelevant. Why do we need the
justification of outsiders, when there are local bodies that have been
set
up to do just that?" Mare asked.

Mare and the other members of the portfolio committee were also left
out of
a tour of the fields over the weekend, which saw the return of the
international monitor, Abbey Chikane. Chikane was appointed by the
Kimberley
Process, the international trade watchdog, to monitor Zimbabwe's
efforts to
fall in line with trade standards.

But Chikane has been implicated in corruption at the site after diamond
researcher Farai Maguwu, who was jailed for more than five weeks,
accused
Chikane of 'shopping' him to the police. Diamond rights groups have
called
for Chikane to be dropped as the monitor to Zimbabwe, saying his
position is
'compromised'. In the meantime, news of his weekend visit prompted a
reported clean-up operation at the Chiadzwa mining site last week.
Villagers
there spoke of police and military officials driving out any illegal
panners
from the site, all to prepare for Chikane's visit.