Kimberley Process Report to UNGA 55
Report of the Kimberley Process to the United Nations General Assembly as per
Resolution 55/56 of 1 December 2000
Introduction
Operative paragraph
6 of the United Nations General Assembly (UNGA) Resolution 55/56, adopted on 1
December 2000 requests the countries participating in the Kimberley Process to
present to the UNGA, no later than its 56th Session, a report on progress made
with regard to developing detailed proposals for a simple and workable
international certification scheme for rough diamonds. Resolution 55/56 also
records the decision by the General Assembly to include in the provisional
agenda of its 56th session the item entitled “The role of diamonds in fuelling
conflict”.
Objectives of the Kimberley Process
The Kimberley
Process was established through initiatives by Southern African diamond
producing countries in order to:
(a) Stem the flow of rough diamonds
used by rebels to finance armed conflict aimed at overthrowing legitimate
governments, thereby making a substantial contribution to international peace
and security;
(b) Protect the legitimate diamond industry, upon which
many countries are dependent for their economic and social development;
(c) Achieve the above through the creation and implementation of an
international certification scheme for rough diamonds, based primarily on
national certification schemes and on internationally agreed minimum standards.
Participation in the Kimberley Process
Participation included
States and the European Community involved in the production, exporting and
importing of rough diamonds, the number of which grew considerably following the
adoption of UNGA Resolution 55/56. Furthermore, all member states of the United
Nations were notified of meetings to be held and invited to indicate their
interest in attending.
Representatives from the diamond industry,
notably the World Diamond Council, and civil society are also active
participants in the Kimberley Process.
Representatives from United
Nations Sanctions Committees for Angola, Sierra Leone and Liberia, the
Monitoring Mechanism on the situation in Angola as well as the Expert Panel on
the Illegal Exploitation of Natural Resources and other forms of Wealth in the
Democratic Republic of the Congo, also attended the meetings.
Meetings
held
The Kimberley Process, chaired by South Africa, held the following
meetings since the adoption of Resolution 55/56, with the view to developing
detailed proposals for an international certifications scheme for rough
diamonds:
Windhoek, Namibia, 13 to 16 February 2001;
Brussels,
Belgium, 25 to 27 April 2001;
Moscow, Russian Federation, 3 to 4 July 2001;
Twickenham, United Kingdom, 11 to 13 September 2001;
Luanda, Angola, 30
October to 1 November 2001;
Gaborone, Botswana, 26 to 29 November 2001.
These meetings summarised their proceedings in communiqués attached to
this report as Annexes 1 to 6.
Progress achieved
At the
above-mentioned meetings, detailed proposals for an international certification
scheme for rough diamonds were developed, as set out in the Kimberley Process
Working Document 9/2001 entitled “Essential Elements of an International Scheme
of Certification for Rough Diamonds with a view, to breaking the link between
armed conflict and the trade in rough diamonds”. The document is attached as
Annex 7. At the meeting in Gaborone, Ministers and the representatives of the
world`s leading rough diamond producing, exporting, and importing states, the
European Community, the Southern Africa Development Community, and other states
concerned by the devastating effects of trade in conflict diamonds declared
that:
1. The detailed proposals for an international certification
scheme for rough diamonds developed by the participants in the Kimberley Process
and presented in the form of Kimberley Process Working Document 9/2001
“Essential Elements of an International Scheme of Certification for Rough
Diamonds, with a view to breaking the link between armed conflict and the trade
in rough diamonds”, dated 28 November 2001, provide a good basis for the
envisaged certification scheme;
2. The certification scheme should be
established through an international understanding as soon as possible,
recognising the urgency of the situation from a humanitarian and security
standpoint. Those in a position to issue the Kimberley Process Certificate
should do so immediately. All others are encouraged to do so by 1 June 2002. It
is the intention of participants to start the full implementation simultaneously
by the end of 2002.
3. The mandate for the Kimberley Process should be
extended until the beginning of the simultaneous implementation, in order to
undertake the finalisation of the international understanding;
4. The
widest possible participation in the certification scheme is essential and
should be encouraged and facilitated.
The Ministers also recognised the
need to ensure that the measures taken to implement the international
certification scheme for rough diamonds must be consistent with international
law governing international trade.
Conclusion
The Ministers
recommended that the United Nations take action to support the implementation of
the international certification scheme for rough diamonds as an instrument that
would help to promote legitimate trade and ensure the effective implementation
of the relevant Resolutions of the United Nations Security Council containing
sanctions on the trade in conflict diamonds, that are contributing to the
promotion of international peace and security, and the relevant United Nations
General Assembly resolutions as referred to in the scheme.