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Emmanuelle Chriqui

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Make My Valentine's Day Jewelry Conflict-free

Posted: 02/08/2013 1:24 pm

This Valentine's Day, as many of us give and receive gifts of flowers, chocolate, or jewelry, I can't help but wonder if the gold jewelry for sale could be connected to a war halfway around the world.

In eastern Congo, the world's deadliest conflict since WWII rages, and more than five million people have died from war-related causes. The conflict gold trade in eastern Congo has become a very lucrative business for some of the armed groups perpetuating the conflict, many of whom use coercion and violence to secure control of the mines and strategic trade routes.

Sadly, the majority of people who are most negatively affected by the conflict gold trade are Congolese civilians -- particularly women and children. Tens of thousands of the miners working in harsh and dangerous conditions are children as young as 11 years old, and mass rape of women is used by armed groups that profit from gold as a strategic weapon of war.

After watching the Enough Project's new "Raise Hope for Congo" video, I was appalled that in some small way, the jewelry I wear every day could be part of the problem.

However, the jewelry industry could be a part of the solution. The jewelry industry is the world's largest gold consumer and has significant influence over the global trade. If jewelry companies took the lead on investing in conflict-free gold from the Congo, then, as consumers, we could buy jewelry that would benefit local communities rather than armed groups. This could help to greatly reduce profits for warlords and provide paid jobs for miners who have traditionally been exploited. There are new conflict-free gold projects in eastern Congo, but they need a market to work, and this is where jewelers can come in.

Over the past couple of years, I have been part of the growing conflict-free movement calling on electronics companies to clean up their supply chains. Electronics companies are major consumers of tin, tungsten, and tantalum -- the other three conflict minerals that are funding armed groups in eastern Congo. Although it has been an uphill battle, we have seen significant progress and innovative conflict-free initiatives from companies that have already had positive impact on the ground in Congo.

The Motorola Solutions for Hope Project and Philips' Conflict-Free Tin Initiative have proven that wages can increase for Congolese miners, and everyone can benefit. But gold is still left out of the equation -- for now.

As Valentine's Day approaches, it is time to reach out to jewelry companies and ask them to take the lead on similar conflict-free projects. That way when loved ones buy us a conflict-free gold necklace with gold from Congo next Valentine's Day, we can be sure that its profits are supporting communities in eastern Congo, and not warlords.

So what do you think, jewelry companies? Will you make my next Valentine's Day conflict-free?

Emmanuelle Chriqui (@echriqui), who is most well-known for her role in the HBO series Entourage, is a long-time Congo human rights activist.

 

Follow Emmanuelle Chriqui on Twitter: www.twitter.com/echriqui

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This Valentine's Day, as many of us give and receive gifts of flowers, chocolate, or jewelry, I can't help but wonder if the gold jewelry for sale could be connected to a war halfway around the world.
This Valentine's Day, as many of us give and receive gifts of flowers, chocolate, or jewelry, I can't help but wonder if the gold jewelry for sale could be connected to a war halfway around the world.
 
 
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
William50
10:53 PM on 02/09/2013
I understand you want nice jewelry, but a lot of Americans do not worry about where the stones and gold come from because we don't have the excess cash to buy the darn stuff anyway!
07:14 PM on 02/09/2013
Check out Novica, a National Geographic project that gives artisans from all around the world the opportunity to market and sell their handmade goods to the US and around the world. I have several pieces of jewelry I ordered from the website (made by people in Africa and Thailand). Beautiful and unique instead of the mass produced things you find at the mall.
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MikeDu
Both salubrious and lugubrious concurrently.
03:17 PM on 02/09/2013
If you really want a conflict-free Valentines day don't purchase party drugs. Exstacy is the new war diamond. Yeh yeh, nobody ever admits to smoking dope got from Mexican drug lords. Funny how they seem to make a profit, nonetheless.
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Guys POV
I'm just here for the sideboob
08:36 PM on 02/09/2013
Legalization would be a more effective solution.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
momamazed
It only means what you make it mean.
02:33 PM on 02/09/2013
Forget the trinkets. Give me something real - attention, conversation, snuggles, help with something I find difficult, remind me what you love about me. And there's no one day on the calendar for that - any old time will do.
12:55 AM on 02/09/2013
Conflict free is EASY, buy locally handmade jewelry, get synthetic stones. Stop buying mass market jewelry that only is about marketing the highest apparent value at the lowest possible price.
12:16 PM on 02/09/2013
Right you are!

Or you know, don't expect your partner to buy you shiny trinkets for a faux-holiday largely invented by the greeting card industry.

Take the money and spend it on a charity who supports humans in conflict filled areas on the planet.

Show them you LOVE them, too!
08:57 PM on 02/09/2013
As a local small craft jeweler, buy the jewelery :-P 
04:22 PM on 02/09/2013
Just because something is handmade does not guaranty it is without conflict free gold and silver. I'm a metalsmith myself and I try very hard to reuse metals but sometimes you have to order fresh stock. I buy from a company that does a lot of recycling but I'm sure some of their stock comes from mines and not old silverware.Even when you melt down silver to pour new ingots you have to add a certain amount of fresh silver. I wish it were as easy as you state but we all should be aware. Artist and large manufactures need to be aware.
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FTracy3
My micro-bio is as empty as the rest of my life.
07:10 PM on 02/08/2013
Jewelry? Right now her significant other is dashing back to CVS to return that Whitman Sampler.
05:08 AM on 02/09/2013
Exactly! LOL
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Bertski
just a guy trying not to be part of the problem
06:11 PM on 02/08/2013
Thank you, charliework69, for that unexpected and dead-on post. How is it that women don't feel like they're being paid, or at least rewarded for sex when their men are forced to buy them baubles and trinkets and shiny things every time a diamond conglomerate or greeting card manufacturer decides it's time for a one-way gift-giving holiday? If the woman isn't required to buy something for the man, as well, then it's just socially accepted prostitution. Let the flaming begin....
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RJCalendar
Tract Critic
04:16 PM on 02/08/2013
To save a shopping trip, I bought two lockets at the same shop; one for my wife and one for a friend. I had them engraved with personalized sentiments and, through a concatenation of circumstances, gave both ladies the wrong one.
Not a conflict-free Valentine's Day, but stout denial won through in the end.
03:56 PM on 02/08/2013
I don't understand how in this modern era it's not creepy for guys to give their wives and girlfriends jewelry for Valentines Day or other holidays. I told my husband many years ago when we got married that I was going to be his wife and partner, not his mistress or some kind of "kept" toy, and I would buy my own jewelry should I want it. I think it's pretty prostitute-y to accept expensive jewelry from someone you're having sex with. If you want some expensive goo-gaw, buy it yourself like a real adult.
12:17 PM on 02/09/2013
Faved.

I adore the word goo-gaw, by the way!!
07:18 PM on 02/09/2013
Buying a thoughtful gift for someone is creepy and "prostitute-y?" Okay then.
03:50 PM on 02/08/2013
Thank you Emmanuelle for an informative and timely article. I have just one clarification to add. The Conflict Free Tin Initiative is not a Philips program per se. It is in fact a multi-organization push coordinated by the Netherlands government.

Two corporations are represented on the delegation visiting the mine cited as the potential source of conflict free tin. These are Philips and Motorola Solutions. The trip takes place next week to inspect the mine, talk to workers and the community and assess how secure from interference the supply of conflict free tin ore will be.

It's a really difficult objective to achieve conflict free jewelry and other products and regrettably will not be available this valentines. You can follow the trip on Mike Loch's blog at http://responsibility.motorolasolutions.com/

Simon Propper
CEO Context
01:58 PM on 02/08/2013
If any of my multitude of lovers don't give me blood diamonds, gold or chocolate for VD, I drop them like a hot rock.
09:01 AM on 02/09/2013
As well you should.