Artigo Revisado por pares

The "Kimberley Process": Literary Gems, Civil Wars, and Historical Resources

2003; Michigan State University Press; Volume: 3; Issue: 2 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1353/ncr.2003.0022

ISSN

1539-6630

Autores

Barbara Harlow,

Tópico(s)

Global Maritime and Colonial Histories

Resumo

THE "KIMBERLEY PROCESS" NAMES THE FORMULA AGREED UPON—AND DISAGREED with—to determine the origin of diamonds on the world market and to create a "full-fledged, global diamond certification system." Why a certification system for these gems? Because what had come to be called "blood diamonds" and "conflict gems"—the minerals that were providing the financial support for Africa's "civil wars" and "ethnic conflicts"—were flooding the market and, with the consciousness-raising of various human-rights organizations, diamond sales were being scrutinized even by the fiancées and their suitors who contemplated consummating their union with the proverbial diamond engagement ring. "A diamond," after all, as the De Beers slogan goes, "is forever." But why "Kimberley"? Diamonds were found in South Africa in Kimberley in 1867 and spawned a "rush" to the area of speculators and squatters who dug there a "big hole." The discovery of diamonds in Kimberley was followed by the discovery of gold in the Witwatersrand—and eventually, as some critics argue, the Anglo-Boer War (or rather, the South African War) was fought over these precious mineral resources. Fortunes were made by mine magnates, and lives were lost—the lives especially [End Page 219] of the African migrant workers in the mines—to this underground wealth. And South Africa, it is contended, was made from these resources in the early twentieth century, while at the other end of that century, the diamonds to be found from South Africa to Sierra Leone were funding the civil conflagrations that rifled the continent. But there were other options that the diamonds offered: Sol Plaatje, for example—a founder of the early African National Congress (ANC)—was born in Kimberley. Olive Schreiner's brother Will worked the mines there. "Diamonds are trumps," as Phileas Fogg insisted in Jules Verne's Around the World in 80 Days, and so popular culture, from Daphne Rooke to Ian Fleming and Wilbur Smith, followed suit. Indeed the history of De Beers, no less than that of South Africa itself—and by extension, that of the continent too—could be said to lie buried in Kimberley. Colonial narratives, civil wars, and historical resources are embedded—and reset—in the designs of those Kimberley stories, the literary gems that underwrite a process: the "Kimberley Process."

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