This is a serious piece of writing highlighting some of the investigative journalism work and activism of Global Witness and the like-minded organisations they have worked alongside. It is a book that will make your blood boil one moment before leaving you with tears of despair for what some of mankind is doing. So, take a few calming breaths before you begin and try to look for the occasional bits of hope.
This is a book that takes the reader from the refineries of Russian and the war with the Ukraine, to illegal fishing in the Antarctic, with numerous visits to danger spots across the world and places like Africa and Brazil. It highlights the incredible bravery of journalists and activists attempting to highlight breathtaking abuse and corruption (financial and political). A world where the most valuable criminals are not safe crackers but money launderers, where individual rights are ignored in search of profit and no thought is given to the environment. These investigators are the people who deserve recognition and honours rather than actors and sportsmen.
Colonialism is now a dirty word and the target of Critical Race Theory. It seems ironic that whilst activists are trying to expunge every trace of it in Europe a new form, a neo-colonialism is happening in many parts of the world. The influence of China and Russia is tying the future of African nations to them by infrastructure and aid, in exchange mineral rights and mining concessions. As the book lays out the influence of the Wagner Group takes it further, being in some impoverished countries the de facto rulers. Whilst the atrocities carried out don’t quite reach the levels of those done in the name of King Leopold II the net result is largely the same. Native people exploited and impoverished whilst resources and wealth are taken. The only significant difference being, it is often done with the help and tacit agreement of local politicians, in exchange for a share of the wealth.
Global warming is on everyone’s lips, rightly so, but the world environment is being put under pressure as never before. The scale of trafficking of animal parts, elephant ivory, rhinoceros’ horn, and pangolin scales has hardly abated and in some parts of the world they are still traded out in the open. The level of illegal fishing has been somewhat unrecognised because much of it carried out in the waters around Antarctica, these waters are vast and far away from the trade routes. The chapter on the ‘Thunder’ gives a good idea of the incredible amount of work, some of it dangerous, required to bring one vessel to book.
The case studies are individually interesting, give insight to the dangers faced and how diverse groups can work together in common cause. Some highlight the negative roles some corporations play in the name of profit and the actions of their teams of highly paid (and sometimes mendacious) lawyers. The work of Global Witness does must be researched, documented and evidenced with the upmost care with the constant threat of legal action, which could bankrupt them or tie them up in courts for years to come. This uber professionalism comes through in the writing, though the style adopted is one readable by the masses and not full of sub notes and references. If the reader wants to explore further there is a section of references at the back of the book.
There are some glimmers of hope though; the case studies have some positive outcomes even if they are not to complete satisfaction. The author also looks to the current wave of activism (Extinction Rebellion and Just Stop Oil) likening their actions to the suffragettes. For me the difference is the demands of the suffragettes were within the ambit of the then politicians to grant.