HARARE (AFP) — Zimbabwe on Monday denied it was violating international regulations on conflict diamonds, as a Kimberley Process team started a probe of the country's eastern Marange diamond fields.
Mining secretary Thankful Musukutwa told journalists in the capital that complaints against Zimbabwe for trading in rough diamonds and violating human rights were not true.
"Under the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (KPCS), conflict diamonds are rough diamonds used by rebel movements or their allies to finance conflict armies at undermining legitimate governments," he said about the scheme against "blood diamonds".
"There is no armed conflict or any involvement of a rebel army or movement in Zimbabwe; therefore Marange diamonds do not fall within KPCS definition of conflict diamonds."
A Human Rights Watch report out Friday accused Zimbabwe's armed forces of using torture and forced labour to control the Marange fields, saying more than 200 people had been killed last year.
Zimbabwe last week denied any killings by security forces.
"What we have in Marange are illegal panners who from time to time evade security forces and engage themselves in illegal digging and trading of diamonds," said Musukutwa on Monday.
The Kimberley team's visit was announced on Friday after a three day conference in Namibia where chairman Bernard Esau said the group had no proof of rights violations in Marange but had noted the HRW report.
Musukutwa said Monday's visit is the third by the scheme. "During the last two visits, they found Zimbabwe fully compliant with KPCS rules and regulations," he said.