Blood Diamonds
Greg Campbell: Tracing the Deadly Path of the World's Most Precious Stones. New York: Basic Books, 2004. 251 pp., notes, index.
Greg Campbell is a freelance journalist and the editor of the Fort Collins Weekly, whose works have previously appeared in Christian Science Monitor, the San Francisco Chronicle, and a number of other magazines and newspapers. Campbell made several visits to a war-torn African country of Sierra Leone to trace the path of the most visible symbols of love and marriage: diamonds. What Campbell uncovered was the story of human greed, civil wars, brutality, amputations, mutilations, illegal arms trade, shattered lives, millions murdered and tortured, governments overthrown over and again, children forced to become cold-blooded soldiers, terrorist organizations funded by the gemstone trade, and other dark sides of the diamond industry in the horn of Africa. Campbell argues that the little shiny precious stones we so love to wear or present to our loved ones as gifts are not as pure as they seem to be. The jewelry worn by many people in the world, he argues, "was brought at the expense of innocent and mutilated Africans who will never be able to wear jewelry of their own" because many of them had their limbs and arms amputated in the process of horrendous diamond mining and selling (p. xxv).
Sierra Leone is around the size of the Colorado state and is located in West Africa. The government in the country has become so dysfunctional that other than carrying a geographic name, Campbell writes, Sierra Leone can hardly be called...
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