Michael Nest is the award-winning author of five books. Mining and war are the themes of the first two. The third, Still a Pygmy, is a collaboration with Congolese activist Isaac Bacirongo – the first Indigenous Twa (Pygmy) to ever publish his memoir. Cold Case North: the search for James Brady and Absolom Halkett, is another collaboration: a cold case investigation into the disappearance and alleged murder of two Indigenous activists in Canada in 1967. Take Out the Jocks: a feminist revenge comedy is Michael's first novel. His day job is preventing fraud and corruption. He lives in Montreal, Canada.
This niche mineral that experienced its 15 minutes of fame and price boom in the 2000s, solidified itself as a respectable player in the illegal natural resources trade in Africa. However, Nest provides evidence to support the argument that coltan is not the primary impetus for the Congolese war; rather contested citizenships and weak property rights leading to questions on land ownership are the root causes for violence in the DRC that persists due to a developing (and sometimes, as evidence shows, corrupt) government with a lack of judicial power and ethical enforcement - and the rare minerals trade is funding extraneous players throughout. Ultimately, Coltan politics are just “a minor chapter in a complicated war that was never just about resources” (Nest, 177).
A desperately depressing look at the broader consequences of unregulated exploitation of valuable mineral resources, through a lens focussed on colombite-tantalum, "coltan", mining in the Congo.
Michael Nest writes well, but most importantly in a book like this, resists the tempation of emotionally manupulative narratives in favour of cool reason. He makes good point about the relatively unremarkable status of coltan as a "conflict mineral" despite the media and legislative focus in the US and EU.
The book is replete with poignant witness testimonies, particularly by women, of life in the troubled regions of the Congo. An assortment of paramilitary groups using mutilations, gangrapes, forced labour, and drugs to maintain bloody control in order to fund idealistic conflicts.
Despite being originally released in 2012, the book regains relevance in light of the surging political unrest and violence in the Congo again in 2018.
Worth a read, if only to bear witness to atrocities that those of us in more peaceful nations rarely have to consider.
This book opened my mind to such a small thing, one of the key components in smartphones/tablets is causing a huge impact on social/cultural and environmental behavior in specific regions of the globe. This eye-opening lecture will change the sense with which you consume electronic devices and the frequency you change them. There´s a lot to be done and change starts with our own purchasing and disposing habits.