Is your cell phone fueling the deadliest war in the world?
Posted On July 1, 2009
To protect and empower Congolese women and girls, the RAISE Hope for Congo campaign works to:
Raise awareness about the crisis, the resulting widespread sexual violence against women and girls, and the solutions that are necessary to end the conflict.
Increase news coverage of the conflict in eastern Congo.
Build a movement of activists who can advocate effectively for change.
Influence and change policy on the Congo through promotion of the 4Ps – Peace, Protection, Punishment, and Prevention – the four ingredients necessary to END the mass violence against women in Congo.
WHY CONGO?
Since 1996, the Democratic Republic of the Congo has played host to the world’s deadliest conflict since World War II. More than 5.4 million people have died from the ravaging effects of war and its aftermath. Today, eastern Congo is caught in an epidemic of appalling sexual violence, as militias use rape as a military tactic to destroy communities and exert control over natural resources. The conflict has been marked by cycles of escalation, and the international response has been wholly inadequate.
Following a landmark peace agreement and a tumultuous political transition backed by the world’s largest U.N. peacekeeping operation, the Congo held largely successful elections in 2006. However, elections were not a panacea to eastern Congo’s ills: 45,000 people die each month, mostly from hunger and disease resulting from the ongoing conflict, and over 1 million people have been displaced.
WHY WOMEN?
Congolese women and girls in particular bear the vicious brunt of this crisis. Indeed, eastern Congo right now is the most dangerous place in the world to be a woman or a girl. Used as a weapon of war, sexual violence and rape exist on a scale seen nowhere else in the world. Often successful in its intent to destroy and exterminate, rape is causing the destruction of women, their families, and their communities. Congo’s women are the backbone of Congolese society and are the country’s best, brightest hope. Yet efforts to protect women and girls in the Congo are failing spectacularly.
WHY NOW?
For over a century, the Congo has been plagued by regional conflict and a deadly scramble for its vast natural resources. In fact, the greed for Congo’s wealth has been a principal driver of atrocities and conflict throughout Congo’s tortured history. In eastern Congo today, resources are financing multiple armed groups, many of whom use rape as a deliberate tactic to drive the local population away from mines and other areas that they wish to control.
Despite recent efforts to cement a fragile ceasefire agreement, the Congo remains caught in a vicious cycle of violence and exploitation. Strong U.S. engagement can help end the conflict and the violence against women. Each day that goes by without action, thousands more Congolese are displaced or killed and countless women and girls are raped. Enough is enough. We must tell our leaders that we cannot allow such crimes against humanity to continue, not on our watch.
The world’s deadliest war is raging in eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, and our insatiable demand for electronics products such as cell phones and laptops is helping drive that conflict. Eastern Congo is the most dangerous place in the world to be a woman or girl, and the sexual violence there is often fueled by militias warring over “conflict minerals,” the ores that produce tin, tungsten, and tantalum—the “3 Ts”— that end up being used in our electronic devices.
We need the electronics companies to come clean about the conflict minerals in our cell phones and other gadgets.
MAKE A VIDEO: Design the best video that raises awareness about the link between our cell phones and the violence in Congo, and we will fly you to LA (from within the U.S.) where your winning video will be screened at an entertainment industry event to mark the occasion. The winning video will also be featured on the Enough Project websites and YouTube page.
OUR COOL JUDGES: Oscar-nominated actor Ryan Gosling, actress Sonya Walger from “Lost,” and Oscar-nominated director Wim Wenders.
Our cell phones don’t have to fuel the deadliest war in the world. Use your cell phone to call on electronics companies to COME CLEAN 4 CONGO. All videos should include our call to action:
Text “CONGOPLEDGE” (one word, no spaces) to ACTION (228466)
CHECK OUT THE BEARDED WHITE MALE IN THIS VIDEO, THAT IS OUR OWN FR. ROCCO PUOPOLO!