Soldiers pulled off diamond fields

Last updated 00:00 20/11/2009

Relevant offers

Africa

Lioness kills zoo worker in South Africa A year since Mubarak ousted, strike call shows divisions Gaddafi's son warns of uprising Bungled conservation effort kills Sth African rhino Libyan refugees killed in camp Egypt to try 19 Americans in case straining ties Catching malaria comes with the job Four more dead in ongoing Egypt violence Police shoot protesters in Suez - report Egyptians incensed after 74 die in football tragedy

Zimbabwe has started withdrawing soldiers from diamond fields in the east of the country after recommendations by the Kimberly Process and criticism over rights abuses, state media reported.

The government deployed soldiers at the poorly secured diamond fields in Marange last year to seal off the area and clamp down on illegal mining, but rights activists say this resulted in serious rights abuses by the army.

A meeting in Namibia early this month of the Kimberlyiamonds in Marange in a joint venture with two little-known South African companies, Core Mining and Grandwell Holdings.

Mpofu said there was still room for more foreign investors to prospect for diamonds in Marange and across Zimbabwe.

"I want to urge all investors interested in diamond mining or other mining activities to come to Zimbabwe and work with the government," he said.

In September Mpofu said the government would insist on a 50 percent shareholding in all diamond mining ventures, but it is unclear what stake the government holds in the Marange venture.

Mpofu is consulting industry officials on an eagerly awaited mining bill which investors had hoped would scrap the requirement for foreign mines to sell majority shares to locals.

Murowa mine in central Zimbabwe, majority owned by Rio Tinto, is the country's largest diamond mine, while the privately run River Ranch mine is the second biggest.

Ad Feedback

- Reuters

Special offers

Featured Promotions

Sponsored Content