Why The Kimberley Certification Process For “Conflict Free Diamonds” Must Be Abandoned (Part Two)
“One recent event would make George Orwell rise from the dead and shout, ‘I told you so!'”
As outlined in my first post, the Kimberley Process Certification (KP) is failing to ensure the conflict-free status of the diamonds it certifies. I believe on of the main reasons it was destined to fail because, in context to the blood diamond issue, there has not been, in the jewelry sector, significant or meaningful public accountability. The death of millions of Africans in the conflict diamond wars has become a marketing problem, or merely “a statistic.”
Instead, what we now see is brazenly sanctioned denial of past events and their moral consequence. I see this as a symptom of the hidden underlying toxicity and violence behind the engagement ring you may be wearing or selling to some costumer who trusts you as a jeweler.
The Responsible Jewellery Council: Squandered Leadership
The Responsible Jewellery Council (RJC), with over 400 members, is considered a leader in setting forth responsible practices for the jewelry sector. It is a nonprofit organization representing large mining and trade groups — De Beers, Rio Tinto, Jewelers of American, and others — after the blood diamond tragedy became widely public.
I fully understand that the ethical issues faced by large-scale companies are not the same that I face in my designer jewelry company and I have followed this organization with both hope and skepticism.
Unfortunately, the veracity of RJC’s mission and approach to ethical concerns within the jewelry sector has been extensively criticized by civil society institutions from the beginning. I will not detail the many issues here. If you want more information, a recently publication on the RJC (More Shine Than Substance…) authored by environmental and labor groups is devastating.
Apart from policy issues outlined in the report, one recent event would make George Orwell rise from the dead and shout, “I told you so!” Symbolism in jewelry and jewelry issues is important. This past January, the RJC appointed James Courage as its new CEO. Despite Courage’s professional qualifications as a business leader, his appointment makes a statement.
Courage worked in marketing for De Beers from 1983 to 1996.
It was during the nineties that conflicts funded by the diamond trade were prevalent. It is common knowledge that De Beers is central to the African diamond trade. Though De Beers publicly denies the complicity in the blood diamonds wars, they did, according to investigative journalists, buy diamonds from the rebels in Angola until 1998, when UN sanctions were put in place.
The symbolism of Courage’s appointment is illustrative of how confident the RJC is that the legacy events are under control. Putting a De Beers executive in charge of its organization could have never happened 10 years ago, when the blood diamond issues were just becoming public.
The hiring of Courage, which has drawn little criticism from the jewelry press, is a victory for those who want to bury history. It is also desecration of the souls who were killed and a callous dagger to the heart of the survivors.
Indeed, the entire jewelry sector (of which I am a member) is deeply complicit in crimes against humanity. We need some widely public international event that will break the jewelry sector’s denial and shake us free from the insidious collective consensus trance.
We need truth and reconciliation.
I suggest that those diamond war survivors who walk around Sierra Leon with stumps instead of hands need to be brought into the room with the World Diamond Council, De Beers, and a broad spectrum of jewelers.
The historical relationship between diamond mining companies and paramilitary groups, such as Executive Outcome, needs to be exposed. The deaths, the rapes, the maimings, must be made public. The RJC’s corporate sponsors could then build a memorial to blood diamonds, with photos of its victims, just as Cambodia did at S21, their Tuol Sleng Genocide Museum.
Without truth and reconciliation, KP and the current leadership in the jewelry sector, will never have any moral legitimacy. Indeed, these days, without morality or connection to realities on the ground, diamantaires and government officials squander leadership to such a degree that it is garnering widespread criticism even from within the trade.
Criticism From Within The Diamond Sector
In The Hijack Of Industry’s Conflict Diamond Leadership, Chaim Even Zohar, a top diamond analyst, discussed the current state of those who are leading KP issues: anonymous email, secret meetings at the OECD to determine the fate of KP, no transparency or broad stakeholder involvement. This is embarrassing, insular behavior you would expect from young children on the playground.
Even Rob Bates, a leading jewelry trade journalist who specializes in diamond issues, recently wrote of the diamond sector’s sad lack of leadership:
“When your industry is premised on consumer apathy and callousness, that’s not much of a business model.”
Stakeholder Status and the Barriers to Self-Determination.
There are other important, yet related reasons for KP’s failure. Many in the jewelry world falsely believe that KP was responsible for ending the conflict diamond wars. In fact, it was British military intervention in Sierra Leone that achieved a halt of the rebel advance on Freetown and the ensuing collapse of the RFU.
Kimberley has always, in its essence, been antidemocratic.
The millions of small-scale diamond diggers, who suffered in the blood diamond wars, have never been a serious part of the consultation. Those small-scale diamond diggers who work independently have been further disenfranchised by corrupt governments and traders working under the auspicious of KP.
This undermining of their stakeholder status and the institutionalized barriers to self-determination explain, at least in part, the vibrant black market trade in diamonds. KP has not changed the world for small-scale diamond diggers, most of whom still work for a dollar a day.
A New Approach For The Jewelry Sector
Despite what has taken place with KP, I have seen tremendous progress toward a more ethical approach in the jewelry sector over the last seven years. An entirely new ethical jewelry movement is attempting to create virtuous, fair trade supply chains based upon traceability, transparency, and substantive on-the-ground change — uniting small-scale miners with honorable diamond dealers, gold suppliers, jewelers and consumers of conscience.
One excellent example is the Fairtrade and fair-mined gold initiative, a joint effort of the Alliance for Responsible Mining and Fair Labeling Organization. Small companies, jewelers and suppliers with a passion for human rights and environmental justice are taking the lead. Ethical Metalsmiths and Fair Jewelry Action are involved in bringing fair trade gold to the North American market.
In addition to fair trade gem suppliers, Jeweltree Foundation and the Diamond Development Initiative are working with small scale-diamond communities to bring fair trade diamonds to market. These organizations should be in the center of any efforts to reform the diamond sector, as they are on the ground. On the large scale mining side, De Beers, to their credit, has developed an excellent model for beneficiation with the Botswana government.
The elimination of KP though would be a great step in removing the barriers to real and substantive change, and supporting what is best in the emerging ethical jewelry supply chain. Mainstream jewelers who compete in the same market as ethical jewelers could no longer claim KP “conflict free” diamonds.
Ethical jewelers would gain influence because the moral choice would be clear. It would not be as easy for consumers to have so much apathy if the issues were more obvious.
They would know to ask their jeweler whether a diamond is verifiably mine-to-market traceable and transparent — or not.
This article was first published on CSRweb.
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Marc Choyt is Director of Fair Jewelry Action, USA. He is also President of Reflective Images, an ethical jewelry company that selling unique designer wedding rings online and conflict free diamond artisan wedding and engagement rings at Artisan Wedding Rings. He also sells designer is sells Celtic wedding rings and Celtic jewelry.