World Vision Expert: 'Blood Diamond' Movie 'Gripping,' 'Accurate,' Diamond Trade Needs More Oversight
World Vision Expert: 'Blood Diamond' Movie 'Gripping,' 'Accurate,' Diamond Trade Needs More Oversight
International Community Sees Progress in Stopping Illicit Diamond Trade, But Diamonds Continue to Fuel Conflict, Particularly in Congo
WASHINGTON, Dec. 5 /PRNewswire/ -- World Vision's expert on the illegal diamond trade, lauding Edward Zwick's new movie, "Blood Diamond," contends that, while Sierra Leone's war is over, diamonds continue to fund conflicts in Africa, and that the diamond industry and governments must do more to protect the legitimate diamond trade.
Following a sneak preview of the film Friday, Rory Anderson, World Vision's senior policy advisor for Africa and expert on the illegal diamond trade praised the movie as "gripping, compelling and accurate."
The movie, starring Leonardo DiCaprio, Djimon Hounsou and Jennifer Connelly, traces a fictional story of a South African smuggler, an American journalist and a Sierra Leonean fisherman whose lives collide against the backdrop of Sierra Leone's diamond-funded civil war in the late 1990s. The war officially ended in 2002.
"The film's relevance goes beyond the individual situation of Sierra Leone," said Anderson. "It illustrates the incredible devastation the illegal diamond trade has caused -- and continues to cause -- elsewhere in Africa."
In the Democratic Republic of Congo, for example, approximately 1,000 people die every day, as a result of an eight-year conflict that is fueled, in part, by diamond smuggling and the resulting weapons trafficking.
Buying Diamonds in the U.S.
"More than 60 percent of the diamonds on the global market are purchased in the United States," says Anderson. "As a result, Americans can play a powerful role demanding regulation and certification to ensure that these 'conflict diamonds' don't end up in our jewelry stores."
According to a 2004 survey conducted by Amnesty International and Global Witness, 58 percent of American and British diamond retailers had no policy on conflict diamonds. In the United States alone, 59 percent of surveyed retailers refused to discuss whether or not they had a policy.
But Anderson argues that boycotting diamonds isn't the answer.
"Legitimately traded diamonds, particularly in countries like South Africa, Botswana and Namibia, are being used to fund health care, education and other vital services," said Anderson. "We can't punish countries using diamonds to help their people for the crimes committed by rebel groups and others exploiting resources elsewhere."
Before buying diamonds, Anderson says, consumers should ask retailers for their policies on conflict diamonds and for certification that their diamonds were mined and sold legitimately.
Anderson, based in Washington, D.C., is available for interviews throughout this week leading up to Friday's release of "Blood Diamond." She can speak to the following issues:
-- How diamonds are smuggled and used to purchase weapons that fuel African civil wars
-- What progress has been made to regulate the diamond trade;
-- How the implementation of U.S. and international regulation efforts has fallen short and continues to allow un-certified diamonds to enter the global market; and
-- What consumers should ask jewelers and their congressional representatives to do to ensure Americans aren't buying conflict diamonds -- without boycotting the industry.
Please contact Amy Parodi at (253) 709-3190 or aparodi@worldvision.org or Brian Peterson at (407) 491-2399 or bpeterso@worldvision.org for more information or to schedule an interview with Anderson.
World Vision is a Christian humanitarian organization dedicated to working with children, families and their communities worldwide to reach their full potential by tackling the causes of poverty and injustice.
Source: World Vision
CONTACT: Amy Parodi, +1-253-815-2386 (office), or +1-253-709-3190
(mobile), or aparodi@worldvision.org, or Brian Peterson, +1-407-445-6484
(office), or +1-407-491-2399 (mobile), or bpeterso@worldvision.org, both of
World Vision
Web site: http://www.worldvision.org/
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