|
Corporate Social Responsibility
News
11.30.2006 - 10:12am ET
|
CSR News from:
|
|
|
News Category:
|
|
Consumers Should Demand Conflict-Free Diamonds This Holiday Season, Say Global Witness, Amnesty International
Director Ed Zwick, Actress Jennifer Connelly Raise Awareness With Public Service Announcements Filmed in Conjunction With 'Blood Diamond' Movie Release
(CSRwire) WASHINGTON, D.C., November 30, 2006 -- Two international rights
organizations are urging consumers to take action this holiday season to
help prevent blood diamonds from entering the legal diamond trade. Amnesty
International and Global Witness, with the support of the director and cast
members of the movie "Blood Diamond," have launched blooddiamondaction.org,
a website to educate consumers about the role of diamonds in funding
conflicts that have a devastating impact on civilians.
Blood diamonds are gems that have been used by rebel groups to fund wars
across Africa, leading to more than four million deaths and millions more
people displaced from their homes. "Despite the tragedies that blood
diamonds have caused, neither governments nor the diamond industry is
doing enough to stop them," said Global Witness Director Charmian Gooch.
"Consumers have the power to effect industry-wide changes simply by
demanding that their diamonds are clean."
Consumers should ask retailers the following four questions when
purchasing diamonds:
Do you know where your diamonds come from?
May I see a copy of your company's policy on conflict diamonds?
Can you show me a written guarantee from your diamond suppliers
stating that your diamonds are conflict free?
How can I be sure that none of your jewelry contains conflict
diamonds?
In conjunction with the release of "Blood Diamond," Director Ed Zwick and
Academy Award-winning actress Jennifer Connelly -- who is Amnesty
International USA's Ambassador for Human Rights Education -- recently shot
Public Service Announcements (PSAs) for the organizations to help further
awareness.
"Blood diamonds are not just a problem of the past," said Bonnie Abaunza,
Director of Amnesty International USA's Artists for Amnesty program. "More
than $23 million in blood diamonds are currently being smuggled into U.S.
and international markets from West Africa. Entertainment and industry
leaders have important roles to play as advocates who can influence the
United States to demand better checks on the diamond industry."
To ensure the diamond industry is living up to the necessary standards,
Amnesty International and Global Witness are updating their 2004 survey of
the top diamonds retailers in the United States and the United Kingdom.
That survey pointed to the industry's failure to adequately implement a
system of self regulation. The new survey will include the top 75 diamond
retailers and suppliers in the United States to ensure that the industry
has addressed the gaps uncovered in the organizations' 2004 survey. Global
Witness and Amnesty International are calling on the industry to establish
vigorous codes of conduct and put in place an independent verification
system, both with actionable timetables.
The results of the survey will be posted on www.blooddiamondaction.org
next February. Until then, consumers can view the movie trailer and PSAs
on the site, and download letters that they can send to the U.S.
government and the World Diamond Council. To further educate and engage
young people about blood diamonds -- as well as child soldiers, another
main theme in the movie -- Amnesty International USA's Human Rights
Education program has developed a curriculum guide to be used in
conjunction with the PSAs in high schools and universities across the
country.
Global Witness investigates the links between the exploitation of
natural resources and the funding of conflict and corruption. It is
non-partisan in all its countries of operation. Global Witness was
co-nominated for the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize for its leading work on
conflict diamonds and awarded the Gleitsman Foundation prize for
international activism in May 2005.
Amnesty International is a Nobel Peace Prize-winning grassroots
activist organization with more than 1.8 million members worldwide.
Amnesty International undertakes research and action focused on preventing
and ending grave abuses of the rights to physical and mental integrity,
freedom of conscience and expression, and freedom from discrimination,
within the context of its work to promote all human rights.
|
|