Forced displacements in mining communities: politics in Chiadzwa diamond area,Zimbabwe |
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Authors: | Simbarashe Gukurume Lloyd Nhodo |
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Affiliation: | 1. Institute for Humanities in Africa, University of Cape Town, Cape Town, South Africa sgukurume1@gmail.com;3. Faculty of Social Sciences, Great Zimbabwe University, Masvingo, Zimbabwe |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT The Chiadzwa diamonds attracted widespread attention due to human rights violations and illegal smuggling. When diamonds were discovered in 2006, thousands of artisanal miners descended on the diamond fields. In response, the government unleashed the army and police in brutal crackdowns to drive artisanal miners off the diamond fields. This militarisation of diamond fields and extraction was followed by forced displacement of the Chiadzwa people. This article examines the lived, everyday experiences of the displaced Chiadzwa people. Findings reveal that displacements dislocated the livelihoods and socialities of the people. Displacements also exacerbated people's vulnerability to livelihood shocks, insecurity, and poverty. In relocating people the government adopted a ‘top-down’ approach which triggered contestations and conflicts with the people who felt alienated from their ancestral land and excluded from diamond wealth. Consequently, sabotage, resistance and subversion were commonplace in the relocation process. These socio-political ‘tactics’ should be viewed as ‘weapons of the weak’. |
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Keywords: | Forced relocation Chiadzwa Interface analysis sustainability blood diamonds |
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