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The Real Mobile Phone Wars - DRC, 10 October 2001
As the high tech age takes over more and more of our lives manufacturers will go to any lengths to get the sometimes scarce minerals that go into them. Tantalum is one such rare ingredient. Few of us know that in the middle of Africa much human suffering is created in the pursuit of it.
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Coltan is a valuable metal because it can be processed and manufactured into a component called a capacitor, which sits on the circuit board of mobile phone and other portable electronic devices. The Democratic Republic of Congo is the world's second biggest supplier of coltan (after Australia), supplying an estimated 18 per cent of the world market. The trouble with coltan from Congo is that it is fuelling the war there. Various rebel groups and militias are mining, stealing, taxing and/or smuggling coltan to raise funds for their war effort. A recent UN report has declared the trade in coltan from Congo illegal because the legitimate and internationally recognised Government of the Democratic Republic of Congo does not license it. Instead the trade of coltan is helping to destabilise that government. Our reporter, JULIANA RUHFUS, travels via Uganda across the Kasindi border crossing, to Congo, her quest to find the source of coltan. Her often dangerous journey takes her via coltan traders, miners and warlords including the Mayi Mayi.
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A report by Juliana Ruhfus for Unreported World. Produced by Mentorn. Ref. 1170
Distributed by Journeyman Pictures
Dr. Molefi Asante discusses his dream for a United States of Africa, a movement begun by Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana's first president. He will examine the prospect for an African Renaissance based on the idea of an African Federative Union and present the prospects and problems of a continental government in Africa.
Essex County College's Africana Institute's Garvey/Nkrumah Lecture Series from 2014 featuring Dr. Leonard Jeffries. Created by the Essex County College Media Production & Technology Center.
HAPI Talks with HAPI Cast Member Dr. Leonard Jeffries about Economics, Politics and Culture.
Please visit www.hapifilm.com to get a copy of the Groundbreaking documentary film HAPI and all the latest HAPI gear.
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When we walk into a supermarket, we assume that we have the widest possible choice of healthy foods. But in fact, over the course of the 20th century, our food system was co-opted by corporate forces whose interests do not lie in providing the public with fresh, healthy, sustainably-produced food.
Fortunately for America, an alternative emerged from the counter-culture of California in the late 1960s and early 1970s, where a group of political anti-corporate protesters–led by Alice Waters–voiced their dissent by creating a food chain outside of the conventional system. The unintended result was the birth of a vital local-sustainable-organic food movement which has brought back taste and variety to our tables.
FOOD FIGHT is a fascinating look at how American agricultural policy and food culture developed in the 20th century, and how the California food movement has created a counter-revolution against big agribusiness.
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Content licensed from Cargo Film & Releasing. Any queries, please contact us at: owned-enquiries@littledotstudios.com
Produced by Chris Taylor
How Corporations Ruined Food (Food Industry Documentary) - Real Stories
Oloku Bini Ceremony (long)
This video explains the meaning of the word Kôngo as alluding to the divine mystery as the teaching of the import and the practice of God's law.
The video shows also that the purpose assigned to the Kôngo people is to preserve the African divine mystery, which is an exact science, and give it back to the African nation for cultural reunification of the Blacks of the continent and the diaspora.
The ideas of this video have been inspired by my book titled BUKÔNGO available at
http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=kiatezua.
Olokun Juju dance Ceremony
Bwiti of the Fang 1963
This is a ceremony by the the people of Moree during the initiation of the their high priestess. The Moree People are An Akan ethnic group in West Africa, Burkina Faso/Ghana. The Moree People normally initiate their new traditional priestess during their annual festival