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A Clockwork Orange

"Slave Hunter" Co-Authors Chime in on Technology, Internet

By Matt Coker, Thursday, Jul. 2 2009 @ 5:52PM
Comments (3)
Categories: Politics
slave-hunter-cover.jpg
CORRECTED VERSION...

You'll find separate interviews on this site with Aaron Cohen and Christine Buckley, the co-authors of Slave Hunter: One's Man's Global Quest to Free Victims of Human Trafficking (Simon & Schuster). One thing you won't read in those Q&As is their shared beliefs that technology and the Internet are helping to make the cause to end global slavery easier. That's because we've saved those comments for this post.

"As I watch coverage of the events in Iran, I'm torn," Buckley says while preparing to leave New York for her home in Paris. "I'm pleased that technology (particularly Twitter and text messaging) has enabled the demonstrators to protest, access information and communicate with each other. But given (former Iranian President Mohammad cleric Ayatollah Ahmad) Khatami's threat, I also fear for their lives. The regime will not go down without shedding blood. There are many parallels with the situation in Burma and North Korea."

Buckley mentioned this last week, before today's Radio Free Asia revelation about a leaked report purportedly drafted by authorities in Burma's military government describing a top-secret visit to North Korea late last year by Burma's top brass, during which the two sides pledged to significantly expand cooperation in military training and arms production. The 37-page report in Burmese claims to contain details of a Nov. 22-29 visit to North Korea by 17 Burmese officials, billed as a goodwill visit to China and reportedly led by Gen. Thura Shwe Mann, Burma's third-ranked leader and armed forces chief of staff.
cohen-in-burma.jpg
Photo courtesy of Aaron Cohen
Aaron Cohen is flanked by soldiers of the Shan State Army in Myanmar.
Burma and Iran's roles in the human trafficking Cohen is trying to stop received prominent attention in Slave Hunter and Buckley's similarly titled June 2007 OC Weekly cover story on her future co-author, who has long been a student of the Middle East as part of his life's work, something that has earned him a fatwa. But on his cell phone shortly after returning to Orange County from New York last week, Cohen said he suspects any death orders fatwas have been dropped as a changing administration changed its view toward the Middle East--and vice versa.

"The former model was these were clashing civilizations that were being looked at religiously," Cohen explained. "They reworked the war on terror as a war on ideology. In that kind of environment, that kind of thing [fatwas] flourished. When Barack Obama gave his speech in Egypt, one thing he talked about is Islam is not part of the problem, it is part of the solution. That was a very radical statement for the president of the United States to make. He defined a new foreign policy that includes religion. You will not see the issuance of fatwas like you would when people perceived this as east versus west. In fact, I just worked with imam Feisal Abdul Rauf on a Washington Post article on Obama's speech."

Cohen believes what's happening in Iran is a reflection of a similar change in long-held views about governance of people there. "I think what's so provocative is you have neocons and you have Muslim extremists and you have prophetic scriptures that show certain nations at conflict in the Middle East," Cohen says. "What we've got to do is move away from these. Also in Iran, in the recent election, there was a huge democratic movement."

Technology is fueling that movement, or at least getting the word out to the world about it. And despite Buckly's fears about the short-term repression of democracy seekers in Iran, she is confident, "that technology and the Internet are the key tools we need to provide oppressed people--helping them free themselves from brutal dictatorships."

Cohen agrees--and believes technology can push other human rights issues farther.

"I see benefits from technological advances and the Internet's emergence to solve problems and end hunger," he said. "There are a lot of things we can solve now. We just have to make everything work and learn to talk to each other. Human rights brings together all sides. When Palestinians work with Israelis in rescuing children, their other conflicts are easier to solve."
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  • 'Slave Hunter' Aaron Cohen Throws the Book at Human Trafficking July 2, 2009
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More About:

  • Aaron Cohen
  • Christine Buckley
  • Barack Obama
  • Politics
  • Human Rights Policy

Comments (3)

Christine Buckley says:

I was referring to cleric Ayatollah Ahmad Khatami, not the former Iranian president (a relative softie). Ahmad Khatami is the guy who
suggested the rioters be punished "without mercy."

Posted On: Thursday, Jul. 2 2009 @ 6:38PM
Matt Coker says:

Sorry, Christine, I've updated with corrections.

Posted On: Thursday, Jul. 2 2009 @ 7:12PM
Difficult issue says:

In Iran and elsewhere,
For editor or English teacher – I call “them” collective I (eyes) I we, you he she the reader can decide for themselves who or what that is. For example If I say “Praise Allah or I will kill you” and I am seriously threatening someone the you is me. Get it? Levity and exaggeration is useful for framing the problem not framing the person.
Protesting and dissenters are generally victims of past circumstances, particularly if they are articulating valid concerns and using peaceful means to ask for mediation. When they are brutalized and terrorized... very bad things can happen. Riots are a hysterical consequence. Provoking a crowd or person into a violent frenzy is serious criminal activity.
And things can go wrong on both sides of the crowd control problem, Kent State for example. Or a peaceful protest where a lone or small group of saboteurs create situations were violence erupts- you end up with a lot of innocent victims.
Protesting does help raise the consciousness and will of the people that there are serious problems and exploitations that need focused efforts to improve and alert the system to be aware of victimization will occur. Usually for false pretense and selfish motive or hate.
That doesn't mean things are going to improve, but rather starts the process toward identifying the root causes of the problem. Clerics... written words, false pretense, exaggerations, taken out of context coupled with bigotry and domination for the sake of greed can be very dangerous indeed.
Megalomaniacs turn on their own supporters and families if they disagree with them, and that is a big problem.
Then they make sure no one else can support the concerned party and make threats and carry them out and are rewarded for it. That’s got to stop. They can use publicity "within their control" to fool a large numbers of people to believe that the exploited person(s) or group is the problem and "we" need to cleanse them, Religious rhetoric for example and historical references available.
Extremism, these people’s families are in jeopardy because they are raising concerns legally here?
That sounds like disaster for the people who would act on that here, there or anywhere with or without our involvement.
The grief of a Tokyo rose –
I wish I had answers but sometimes it best not to stir the pot and use quite diplomacy to get the point across. If you care about issues you are probably going to get spied upon and restrained from being able to participate or mitigate or help solve the issue, Tie it to some other parallel to get the point across use the problem as a catalyst for creative advantage. Show your intellect and try to come up with fair solutions for you, yours, and others too. Be wary and report abuses.
These are difficult time, with difficult problems.

We can't solve the world’s problems in 2000 years. or 7000 years for that matter. Progress comes slow in places where you have some guy or girl playing god and getting away with it.

Posted On: Friday, Jul. 3 2009 @ 6:29AM

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