Last week I had a brief telephone interview with Brian Brundage, CEO of Intercon Solutions. Brian had texted me about his lawsuit vs. Basel Action Network, the NGO in Seattle which accused Intercon Solutions of illegally exporting toxic computer scrap to China.
I've written about Intercon before. I don't really claim to know the facts of the case. But I do know very well the modus operendi of the NGO in Seattle. From Oxford dictionary...
con·jec·ture ( kənˈjekCHər/) noun
speculation, guesswork, surmise, fancy, presumption, assumption,theory, postulation, supposition;
verb
guess, speculate, surmise, infer, fancy, imagine, believe, think,suspect, presume, assume, hypothesize, suppose
"I conjectured that the game was over"
In several direct cases I am personally aware of, Jim Puckett of Basel Action Network defamed businesspeople on little evidence and lots of assumptions and a dollop of chutzpa. PT Imtech in Semarang, Indonesia was one. He was the primary source of the "80% of used electronics are junk" faux statistic, according to everyone from Terry Gross (Fresh Air) to Peter Essick (National Geographic) to the new generation of photojournalists (Benito, McElvaney, Hugo, etc.)
The photos of Agbo don't generate money for orphans or recyclers. They generate money for journos, NGOs, lawyers and defamation cases.
At the EScrap Conference, held by Resource Recycling in Orlando for the last couple of years, Jim spoke to an audience that was shown direct evidence that Agbogbloshie never received a sea container of junk electronics. Ever. Not even accessible. Two professional experts born and raised in Ghana (Grace Akese and Emmanuel Nyalete) were there with him in the audience, telling him that Agbogbloshie was a scrap automobile yard, and that the VCRs and computers delivered there are collected house to house in a metropolis of 4 million people who have had electricity for decades (Accra proper is about 2.5M, but the city has expanded. Agbogbloshie is a slum and market near the city center).
Jim went on to speculate that while the sea containers arrive hours away, that the junk electronics were distributed to shops throughout the city, and then collected by pushcart. Effectively, Jim was accusing people like Joe Benson, Africa's Tech Sector, of being incapable of sourcing 95% good computers, unable to repair them, but somehow stupidly were laundering "millions of tons" of junk electronics... for free. No, not for free. That they pay for these junk pieces, paying typically ten times more than the copper is worth when it reaches Agbogbloshie.
Kevin McElvaney, the German photojournalist, was at the conference as a speaker and also in the audience. The following day, McElvaney inserted himself to answer a question directed initially to Grace Akese, the Memorial University Ph.D. researcher from Ghana. McElvaney basically gave Jim's version, that the junk is distributed through repair shops and secondary markets. His evidence was not in any of the Secretariat of Basel Convention funded studies... it was based on what he knows... photography.
I've written about Intercon before. I don't really claim to know the facts of the case. But I do know very well the modus operendi of the NGO in Seattle. From Oxford dictionary...
con·jec·ture ( kənˈjekCHər/) noun
- an opinion or conclusion formed on the basis of incomplete information. "conjectures about the newcomer were many and varied"
speculation, guesswork, surmise, fancy, presumption, assumption,theory, postulation, supposition;
verb
- form an opinion or supposition about (something) on the basis of incomplete information. "he conjectured the existence of an otherwise unknown feature"
guess, speculate, surmise, infer, fancy, imagine, believe, think,suspect, presume, assume, hypothesize, suppose
"I conjectured that the game was over"
In several direct cases I am personally aware of, Jim Puckett of Basel Action Network defamed businesspeople on little evidence and lots of assumptions and a dollop of chutzpa. PT Imtech in Semarang, Indonesia was one. He was the primary source of the "80% of used electronics are junk" faux statistic, according to everyone from Terry Gross (Fresh Air) to Peter Essick (National Geographic) to the new generation of photojournalists (Benito, McElvaney, Hugo, etc.)
The photos of Agbo don't generate money for orphans or recyclers. They generate money for journos, NGOs, lawyers and defamation cases.
At the EScrap Conference, held by Resource Recycling in Orlando for the last couple of years, Jim spoke to an audience that was shown direct evidence that Agbogbloshie never received a sea container of junk electronics. Ever. Not even accessible. Two professional experts born and raised in Ghana (Grace Akese and Emmanuel Nyalete) were there with him in the audience, telling him that Agbogbloshie was a scrap automobile yard, and that the VCRs and computers delivered there are collected house to house in a metropolis of 4 million people who have had electricity for decades (Accra proper is about 2.5M, but the city has expanded. Agbogbloshie is a slum and market near the city center).
Jim went on to speculate that while the sea containers arrive hours away, that the junk electronics were distributed to shops throughout the city, and then collected by pushcart. Effectively, Jim was accusing people like Joe Benson, Africa's Tech Sector, of being incapable of sourcing 95% good computers, unable to repair them, but somehow stupidly were laundering "millions of tons" of junk electronics... for free. No, not for free. That they pay for these junk pieces, paying typically ten times more than the copper is worth when it reaches Agbogbloshie.
Kevin McElvaney, the German photojournalist, was at the conference as a speaker and also in the audience. The following day, McElvaney inserted himself to answer a question directed initially to Grace Akese, the Memorial University Ph.D. researcher from Ghana. McElvaney basically gave Jim's version, that the junk is distributed through repair shops and secondary markets. His evidence was not in any of the Secretariat of Basel Convention funded studies... it was based on what he knows... photography.