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U.S. Burmese Gem Ban Approved by Congress

July 24, 08 by Ronit Scheyer

The U.S. Congress this week approved legislation blocking the import of gems from Myanmar (Burma). A sister bill was passed in the U.S. House of Representatives last week. The move is an effort to cut off sources of funding for the SE Asian country’s ruling junta, for which the export of rubies, jade and others is a major revenue source.

 

The legislation, which will keep gemstones from Myanmar from entering the U.S. via third-party countries, such as Thailand, China, Taiwan, Malaysia and Singapore, will now be sent to President Bush to be signed into law. The bill also bars the junta’s generals and their families from acquiring visas to enter the U.S. and intensifies pre-existing financial sanctions against the regime.

 

"We cannot allow this regime to prosper financially while they continue to violate the human rights of their own people," said Howard Berman, Democratic chairman of the House foreign affairs committee. "This bill hits the Burmese leaders where it hurts – in the wallet. It's our hope that these sanctions will push other countries to examine their own financial dealings with Burma," Berman said.

 

Jewelers of America (JA) issued a statement commending Congress for passing a bill “to amend the Burmese Freedom & Democracy Act of 2003 to include gemstones mined in Burma.”

 

”JA welcomes the passage of this important amendment and stands ready to work with the Administration as it moves to implement the new requirements," says JA President and CEO Matthew A. Runci.

JA last fall issued an advisory to its members, detailing its concern about the Burmese military government's human rights violations.

 

"JA members believe it is their responsibility to support and respect the protection of international human rights within their sphere of influence and to make sure the sourcing of gemstones is not complicit in human rights abuses, in line with the commitments they assume to the association's Statement of Principles," Runci said at the time.

 

Although an earlier version of the bill was introduced in the fall in response to a violent crackdown by the regime on peaceful protests throughout the country, Congress reconsidered the legislation in the aftermath of the devastating cyclone that ripped through the country in early 2008.

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