'How old are you?' 'Forty-four.' 'Were you in Rwanda in 1994?' 'Yes.' 'Were you a member of Interahamwe?' 'It was a long time ago.' 'I will ask again,' I hissed near his ear. 'Were you a member of Interahamwe?' He looked up to me. His breath smelled terrible. I almost felt nauseous. 'Yes, I was there and I was killing Tutsi cockroaches. They deserved to die.' This is a story about a Geneva-based Coltan trader being drawn into the Congolese conflict fought over natural resources. Four million dead and counting. Without Coltan, our mobile phones won't work. Why is this mineral so important to the Military Industrial Complex? It all started right after the Rwanda Genocide of 1994… "May I call you the Dutch John le Carré?" in an interview with Alphonse Muambi, Congolese Expert on Africa and Strategic Resources, Globalisation and Development. "I have to say, this is an exciting book," in an interview with Pim van Galen, Journalist at Dutch Public Television (NOS). "The plot is really great!" remark by Cecile Dehopre, Doctors Without Borders."Van Campen not only tells an enrapturing tale, he also uses Coltan Congo's Curse as a storytelling mechanism to raise awareness and confront some major issues like child labour, working conditions and conflict minerals in Congo's mining industry today." - Bas van Abel, CEO and Founder Fairphone.
Van Campen is concerned with human and non-human life, the environment and social cohesion. Having travelled the world, he physically experienced and survived an Exocet attack in Iran, worked under military protection in Angola during the civil war fought over diamonds and oil, witnessed the chaos of Kinshasa, walked the dirty streets of Lagos and obeyed orders to stay indoors during curfew in Abidjan when the first civil war started. He understands that economic interests will never allow democratic consultation by the people. Through this story, he offers a scientifically sound solution to end the Congo conflict over mineral resources.