It is widely known that 鈥渂lood diamonds鈥 played a major role in funding the rebel Revolutionary United Front during the ghastly civil war in Sierra Leone (1991-2002).
Yet initiatives designed to keep such diamonds out of the mainstream market have had little impact on the country鈥檚 comparatively neglected artisanal mining sector, where small groups of labourers look for diamonds using only shovels, buckets and sieves. Many rely on 鈥渟upporters鈥 who give them food and tools but only pay them if they find diamonds. A researcher is now taking his film to the United Nations in New York to raise awareness of their plight.
Roy Maconachie, reader in international development at the University of Bath, first went to Sierra Leone in 2003 to study 鈥減ost-conflict reconstruction鈥 and has been returning to the same village ever since. He soon became interested in mining and built up a close relationship with Fourah Bay College (part of the University of Sierra Leone). One of his current projects involves three researchers from Bath and three from Fourah Bay 鈥渟ampling water in artisanal gold-mining areas, and looking at what happens to ecosystem services, and how that impacts on livelihoods鈥.
In an earlier film Dr Maconachie made with Elizabeth Fortin and Simon Wharf,聽聽they embraced a 鈥減articipatory methodology鈥 and let the Ghanaian women record their own experiences in an attempt to avoid the dangers of 鈥渆ducated white men from privileged backgrounds coming in and extracting data for academic papers鈥. His latest project on 鈥淎rtisanal diamonds, resource governance and formalisation in West Africa鈥 was funded by聽聽and employed a postdoc from Sierra Leone, Felix Conteh, who spent half his time in Bath.
Committed to improving the livelihoods of the poorest, Dr Maconachie argued that the best way forward was bringing 鈥渋llicit miners into the legal domain鈥 in order to 鈥渃reate support to provide better working conditions鈥. 聽鈥渟tarts at the very bottom and works through all the stakeholders at a local level, and the very unequal relations between them. We also look at the top of the value chain, in Antwerp, and get some of the people there to reflect on the issues.鈥 It was recently shown publicly in Sierra Leone and, on 18 June, will be presented at 鈥渁 UN policy dialogue鈥 with a panel discussion featuring representatives of the World Bank and the Diamond Development Initiative as well an ethical jeweller.
Asked about the question of 鈥渂lood diamonds鈥, Dr Maconachie reflected that 鈥淒iamonds were certainly part of fuelling the war, but the issues were really about young people鈥檚 grievances. If you don鈥檛 pay attention now to fair pay, environmental conditions and social issues, the same group of people could get angry again. There鈥檚 always that security issue tied to [artisanal mining] as well.鈥
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