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The Real Diamond Facts
Most people are unaware of the role diamonds play in bringing tragedy
and despair to countries around the world where diamonds are
sourced. Nowhere is this more evident than in Africa. It is also
in Africa that this same resource continues to be
used to fund civil wars, terrorism and other human rights
abuses. In 2002, a coalition of governments, non-governmental
organizations and the diamond industry established the Kimberley
Process Certification System, a UN-backed process that tries
to address the narrow definition of
"conflict diamonds." The Kimberley Process has glaring problems
and does not address important human rights abuses including
child labor, state sanctioned violence, environmental destruction,
and poor working conditions.
Realdiamondfacts.org is dedicated
to presenting the real facts about conflict diamonds, along with
how conflict diamonds create poverty, destruction, and
injustice.
| Fact #1: |
In the past 15 years, an estimated 500,000
Angolans, 50,000 people in Sierra Leone, and nearly 4 million people
in the DRC have died from civil wars funded through the sale of conflict
diamonds. |
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| Fact #2: |
A recent study found 46% of miners in
Angola are under the age of 16, with many of the children exploited for
little or no pay because of war, poverty, and the absence of education. |
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| Fact #3: |
300,000 carats of diamonds annually are currently
being mined with slave labor in the rebel-held regions in Ivory Coast
and sold to fund violent conflicts. These diamonds are being smuggled
through neighboring countries to international markets. |
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| Fact #4: |
Sierra Leone is ranked the world's poorest
country by the United Nations Human Development Index,
with poverty in diamond mining areas such as the Kono
District particularly striking.
The Kono District has produced billions of dollars
worth of diamonds. |
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| Fact #5: |
Although the Democratic Republic of Congo
produces more than $2B of diamonds annually, 90% of its population of
60 million lives in abject poverty. The diamond capital, Mbjui Mayi,
has no clean water, poor roads, and minimal electricity. |
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| Fact #6: |
The vast majority of the 1.4 million artisanal
diamond diggers across five African countries live in poverty, making
less than one dollar a day. |
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| Fact #7: |
The use of child labor for cutting and polishing
is extremely common in India, where children suffer from dangerous conditions,
overcrowding, and malnutrition. In many areas, one out of ten workers
polishing a diamond is a child due to minimal government oversight. |
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| Fact #8: |
FBI reports and a Washington Post investigation
have linked Al Qaeda money-laundering efforts to the rough diamond trade
in Sierra Leone. |
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| Fact #9: |
Ninety years of environmental neglect
in Angolan diamond mining have devastated large tracts of land, poisoned
local water, and forced indigenous populations to relocate. |
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| Fact #10: |
After diamonds were discovered, the San Bushmen
were forcibly evicted from their ancestral land in Botswana's
Central Kalahari Game Reserve's land they have lived
on for thousands of years. The Bushmen have faced torture,
severe and routine harassments, and the complete destruction
of their water supplies. |
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These facts have been sourced
from the following:
- Partnership Africa Canada
- Global Witness
- BBC World
- Amnesty International
- Survival International
- Washington Post
- Awareness Times Newspaper in Freetown, Sierra Leone
For those with comments or additional information about
these facts, please contact us at info@realdiamondfacts.org |
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| Make the choice to purchase socially
responsible diamonds, and
encourage others to do the
same. Be a part of the solution,
not the problem. |
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