found at upi.com
April 28, 2007
By a unanimous vote, the 15 members of the council decided to allow the
resumption of diamond sales on the condition the country signs on to the
Kimberley Process, an international diamond certification system that tracks
the origin of diamonds on the international market, a BBC correspondent in New
York reported.
Security
Council lifts Liberia diamond ban
Historically, mining—especially for precious gems
such as diamonds—played a large role in Liberia's economy
British
Ambassador to the United Nations Emyr Jones said the lifting of the ban also
carried a 90-day review contingency.
The vote was seen as a vote of confidence in Liberian President Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf, who was elected in January 2006, the report said. Her
leadership is seen by the United Nations as combating rebel groups who used
the diamond trade's profits to fund insurgencies, giving the name "blood
diamonds" to the export and sale of the gems.
---------------------------------
U.N. Security Council votes to lift ban on
Liberia diamonds
By EDITH M. LEDERER
found at chron.com
Associated Press April
28, 2007
Security Council votes to lift ban on Liberian diamond exports
UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. Security Council voted unanimously Friday to lift
a ban on Liberian diamond exports imposed in 2001 when so-called "blood
diamonds" were being used to fuel civil wars in west Africa.
United Nations Security Council debates Liberia diamonds Ban at UN
headquarters, 17 Apr 2007 Photo AP
Britain's U.N. Ambassador Emyr Jones Parry said the vote was "a
recognition of the progress made in Liberia" to meet the conditions to
join an international program to certify the diamonds' origin to ensure they
were mined legally.
After the vote, Liberia's U.N. Ambassador Nathaniel Barnes said he had just
learned that the Kimberley committee was going to accept Liberia's application
as a result of the council's action, "so as of now, we are officially a
part of the Kimberley Process."
Liberia submitted its application on March 27 to join the Kimberley
Process, a voluntary 71-nation group created out of the furor over
diamond-funded wars in Sierra Leone and Angola. Group members agree to trade
only certified diamonds.
Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf — Africa's first elected woman
leader who took office in January 2006 — inherited one of the world's
poorest countries, battered by back-to-back civil wars from 1989 to 2003 that
left 200,000 people dead, and displaced half the country's 3 million people.
Her government has pressed for the lifting of the diamond sanctions imposed
in May 2001 to stop former president Charles Taylor from using government
revenues from diamonds to fuel civil war in neighboring Sierra Leone. Taylor,
who went into exile in August 2003, faces war crimes charges stemming from his
alleged backing of Sierra Leone's rebels who terrorized victims by chopping
off their arms, legs, ears and lips.
"This government has shown its determination to put in place measures
to ensure that the proceeds of diamond sales go for the benefit of Liberia and
its people and are not misappropriated," said Jones Parry, the current
council president. It's "a reflection of our confidence in that country,
in its leadership."
Barnes said he expects the lifting of diamond sanctions to have an
"incredibly positive" impact because it will provide jobs in a
country with 85 percent unemployment.
"Anywhere on the globe that's unacceptable, but it's further
exacerbated by the fact that a large portion of these unemployed are
ex-combatants," he said. "So by the removal of the sanctions on
diamonds, and the appropriate monitoring mechanisms in place, we'll be able to
put people to work, which is one of the biggest challenges we have right
now."
The resolution was sponsored by the United States. The council said it
would review its decision to lift diamond sanctions in 90 days after
considering a report by a U.N. panel of experts monitoring sanctions on
Liberia's compliance with the Kimberley certification process.
Liberia still is subject to an arms embargo, a travel ban on named
individuals, and an asset freeze against Taylor and his top officials.