Stealing Africa
Watch TrailerZambia's copper resources have not made the country rich. Virtually all Zambia's copper mines are owned by corporations. In the last ten years, they've extracted copper worth $29 billion but Zambia is still ranked one of the twenty poorest countries in the world. So why hasn't copper wealth reduced poverty in Zambia? Once again it comes down to the issue of tax, or in Zambia's case, tax avoidance and the use of tax havens. Tax avoidance by corporations costs poor countries and estimated $160 billion a year, almost double what they receive in international aid. That's enough to save the lives of 350,000 children aged five or under every year. For every $1 given in aid to a poor country, $10 drains out. Vital money that could help a poor country pay for healthcare, schools, pensions and infrastructure. Money that would make them less reliant on aid.
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📋 Film Details
| Year | 2012 |
| Country | Zambia, Switzerland |
| Genre | Documentary |
| Director | Christoffer Guldbrandsen |
| Runtime | 52 min. |
| Rating | TMDB: 8.9/10 (4 votes) |
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🎬 MovieFinder's Take
Christoffer Gulbrandsen crafts a forensic documentary that transforms balance sheets and tax codes into instruments of suspense. The film meticulously connects Zambian dust to offshore havens, making abstract financial flows viscerally tangible through human stories.
What lingers after the credits is not just outrage but a clarified vision of the global architecture of inequality. It's a masterclass in explaining complex systems without losing their human cost — MovieFinder Editorial
Director: Christoffer Guldbrandsen
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Clinical exposition building to moral outrage; stark contrast between corporate glass and African soil.
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