The film is played by Rachel Weisz, an American policewoman who is sent to Bosnia as a UN peacekeeper. After arriving there, the heroine discovers that there are a large number of foreign women who have been trafficked by human traffickers to the local area and forced to engage in sex trade. What is even more shocking is that the service targets are basically UN peacekeepers and policemen, and the peacekeepers even directly participate in human trafficking and act as local villains. umbrella of power. The heroine was obstructed, intimidated, and even dismissed everywhere in the investigation and evidence collection. Finally, she managed to get the evidence and announced the truth to the world through the BBC. But the irony is that the top officials of the United Nations still tried their best to cover up the truth in the program. The responsible person in the incident was only dismissed, and no one was punished by law, and the heroine no longer served in any international organization.
What impressed me the most was a sentence said by a local senior UN official when trying to stop the heroine from continuing to investigate further, "The UN is very important and at the same time very fragile." This sentence should be right to the point. The importance of the United Nations lies in its role in handling international affairs, international disputes and other issues. Its weakness lies in the fact that it is an organization without much real power. So the top does not allow anything that could threaten the organization to happen, and the scandal may not only discredit it, but also threaten its own very existence.
In this incident, the UN officials brought the spirit of "giving up a small family for everyone" to the fullest. Only an international organization can still implement this spirit so deeply, let alone a sovereign country, to pay tribute to the Celestial Dynasty... .
View more about The Whistleblower reviews