Carmignac photojournalism award: Ghana and e-waste
Photojournalists Muntaka Chasant and Bénédicte Kurzen and investigative journalist Anas Aremeyaw Anas have documented the flow of electronic waste between Europe and Ghana for the 13th edition of the Carmignac Photojournalism Award
The opening paragraph of the Guardian's weekend E-Waste Ghana Story is fascinating, because it goes on to completely disprove itself in award-winning own-goalism. The Guardian attempts to actually do what we've been calling on them to do for more than a decade - interview the diaspora and the Tech Sector in the Importing Nations, and don't focus on Basel Action Network and Greenpeace's whitemansplaining of how people buy stuff for reuse. In so attempting, not unlike 2015's UNEP Waste Report "Waste Crime Waste Risks" (where the documentation completely obliterated the Executive Summary, see "Criminal Negligence" reviews in Discard Studies), the Guardian completely nails its own coffin.
The took the bait. They wanted to show they can tell the "Agbogbloshie" story without relying on Jim T. Puckett and Greenpeace #fakestatistics, and to interview #FreeJoeBenson.
The setup is simply a false claim that if a white person doesn't want something, that the something is defined as "waste", which makes it illegal under the Basel Convention to move to a poor non-white person. As this blog has reported ad nauseum, that is NOT what the Basel Convention has ever said. Reuse and repair are deliberately and explicitly NON-WASTE and legal. Europe bought into the "reuse excuse" offered by 80% Falsehood claiming Jim Tiberous Puckett, and then created a burden of proof - that it is PRESUMED discarded, PRESUMED waste, unless the inspector-buyer-exporter-importer AFRICAN can prove it isn't.The Guardian does execute the tried and untrue "Legal" violation claim, and the tried and untrue photos of Agbogbloshie. But by taking our dare to have Africans interview the Africans accused of the "crime", the Guardian completely own-goals its e-waste hoax aspirations.
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