Blood in the mobile
We love our cell phones and the selection between different models
has never been bigger. But the production of phones has a dark, bloody
side.
The main part of minerals used to produce cell phones are coming from
the mines in the Eastern DR Congo. The Western World is buying these
so-called conflict minerals and thereby finances a civil war that,
according to human rights organisations, has been the bloodiest conflict
since World War II: During the last 15 years the conflict has cost the
lives of more than 5 million people and 300.000 women have been raped.
The war will continue as long as armed groups can finance their warfare
by selling minerals.
If you ask the phone companies where their suppliers get minerals
from, none of them can guarantee that they aren’t buying conflict
minerals from the Congo.
The Documentary Blood in the Mobile shows the connection
between our phones and the civil war in the Congo. Director Frank
Poulsen travels to DR Congo to see the illegal mine industry with his
own eyes. He gets access to Congo’s largest tin-mine, which is being
controlled by different armed groups, and where children work for days
in narrow mine tunnels to dig out the minerals that end up in our
phones.
After visiting the mine Frank Poulsen struggles to get to talk to
Nokia, the Worlds largest phone company. Frank Poulsen wants them to
guarantee that they are not buying conflict minerals and thereby is
financing the war in the Congo. Nokia cannot give him that guarantee.
Blood in Mobile is a film about our responsibility for the conflict in the Congo and about corporate social responsibility.
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