A
10-year-old boy, his face still innocent, abducted from his village and forced
to kill alongside ruthless militia fighters. A 60-year-old grandmother too
ashamed of the injuries caused by a brutal rape to leave her house for five
months, even though her wounds worsened. A girl who reminded me of my own
daughter, bridging the years between youth and womanhood, who had been dragged
into a forest near her house by a group of men and raped, over and over again.
Images
of these people, whose quiet but warm personalities barely hint at the atrocities
they have survived, give a human face to the conflict in eastern Congo that has
long moved me as an activist. With well over 5 million people dead through war
and its accompanying hardships spanning more than a decade, it is difficult to
imagine the daily impact of a conflict of this magnitude, much less to feel
empowered to do anything about it.
Robin
Wright
A
new documentary film, "Blood in the Mobile," powerfully addresses
both the limits of the imagination and our sense of connection to atrocities committed
on the other side of the world. Through a shaky camera in the damp and dark
mines of eastern Congo, filmmaker Frank Poulsen introduces us to some of the
young men (and even children) toiling at the first stage of Congo's lucrative
business in tin, tantalum, tungsten and gold. But the wealth of this industry
doesn't really benefit the Congolese miners for their back-breaking, perilous
and poorly paid work -- not by a long shot.
Militia
groups and factions of the Congo's army control many mines, imposing heavy
"taxes" on miners for whom there are few alternatives for making a
living. Juxtapose these gritty images of Congo with shots filmed at the
headquarters of Nokia, the electronics powerhouse that sells these minerals in
its consumer products, and you have a message that is difficult to ignore: the
cell phones, laptops, digital cameras and other products we have come to rely
on link all of us to the conflict in Congo.
As
consumers, we're perpetuating the conflict. We have an obligation but also an opportunity.
I
was fortunate to have a chance to travel to eastern Congo recently to see with
my own eyes and to feel, even with the relative safety of traveling with the
ever-attentive Fidel Bafilemba of the Enough Project, the psychological effect
of spending time in an unpredictable conflict zone. I was struck by how we
witnessed the raw, nervous strain of communities said to be post-conflict,
post-traumatic.
But
nothing seemed to be "post-": Indeed, these communities appear to be
enduring conflict and trauma on a daily basis. Local organizations, from the
reintegration center for child soldiers to the rehabilitation center for
survivors of sexual violence, are working as hard as they can to provide solace
and a hopeful future for those most physically and emotionally harmed by the
conflict. But as necessary as these efforts are, they treat the symptoms; there
is little concept of pre-emptive or preventive.
Two
years had passed since U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton came to one of
the same towns I visited. Nearly everyone I met remembered "Mama
Clinton" and asked me to follow up with her when I returned to the United
States. "I think it is no secret to you," one woman said, speaking
into the videocamera and addressing Clinton. "Our wealth is being plundered,
and that's why we are being raped." She urged Clinton to make good on her
promise to bring high-level U.S. attention to the crisis in Congo.
In
particular, Clinton's leadership and gravitas are needed to implement an
international certification scheme that enables companies to trace the source
of the minerals to ensure that they aren't funding armed groups, and that
allows consumers to choose which companies to give business to, based on their
human rights record in Congo.
Visiting
Congo for the first time without knowing the local language, Kiswahili, I was
dependent on my talented interpreter Fidel for putting into words my countless
questions and gratitude to the people I interviewed. But in those moments when
I sat face-to-face with women, neither of us speaking while we listened to his
translation, I would often catch a look, a slight nod, that clearly said,
"I know you know. I know you understand."
Women
have a natural, inherent knowingness, an unspoken connection between us, as
mothers, wives and sisters. For several years I have followed Congo from afar,
understanding theoretically and intellectually how we in the United States
could help end the conflict. Now I deeply feel the why.
By Robin Wright
Special to CNN
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