WEBVTT 00:00:00.000 --> 00:00:19.330 36C3 preroll music 00:00:19.330 --> 00:00:23.020 Robert Tibbo: Thank you for your patience tonight. It was a little bit hectic in my 00:00:23.020 --> 00:00:30.380 getting here on time. So I do apologize. But thank you for all being here tonight. 00:00:30.380 --> 00:00:36.950 Myself and the Snowden refugees, Mr. Snowden, we really appreciate your 00:00:36.950 --> 00:00:42.060 attendance here. The people watching the livestream and the support for my 00:00:42.060 --> 00:00:54.590 clients. And just very briefly, in case there are a few people out there, I met 00:00:54.590 --> 00:01:00.610 Mr. Snowden in 2013, June in Hong Kong. And that's when he made the globally 00:01:00.610 --> 00:01:06.270 significant disclosures of the Five Eyes electronic mass surveillance program. And 00:01:06.270 --> 00:01:12.640 it was at that time that I represented Mr. Snowden in Hong Kong. And thereafter. And 00:01:12.640 --> 00:01:21.320 it was also at that time that I asked for brave adults, incredibly courageous adults 00:01:21.320 --> 00:01:27.400 who exercised decisions of conscience to provide Mr. Snowden with a refuge, with 00:01:27.400 --> 00:01:34.990 shelter, humanity, compassion and caring. And to introduce them again. Briefly, 00:01:34.990 --> 00:01:41.970 Vanessa, on the left, if you're facing the screen from the Philippines to her right. 00:01:41.970 --> 00:01:51.730 To her left. A military deserter from Sri Lanka. Nadeka from Sri Lanka. And on the 00:01:51.730 --> 00:01:58.310 far, far left supporting from Sri Lanka. And these are the three children. On the 00:01:58.310 --> 00:02:09.170 bottom left is Keana, and beside her is her stepsister, Satyamdi. And support is 00:02:09.170 --> 00:02:23.170 holding a little boy Dinath. Applause 00:02:23.170 --> 00:02:28.100 What what I'm gonna do this evening before providing a brief update on the Snowden 00:02:28.100 --> 00:02:35.850 refugee status. I'm gonna go through a bit of law, I think, at this stage. There's 00:02:35.850 --> 00:02:41.060 been such marginalization, demonization, confusion about what refugees are and 00:02:41.060 --> 00:02:46.980 what, you know, what is required to qualify as a refugee. I'm gonna go through 00:02:46.980 --> 00:02:52.890 a number of international law and at the same time. Beyond that, I'm gonna go 00:02:52.890 --> 00:02:57.170 through what's happening globally and in my view, where we're really at a crisis in 00:02:57.170 --> 00:03:05.341 terms of authoritarian leaders democratically elected and ignoring their 00:03:05.341 --> 00:03:11.810 constitutions, violating them, blatantly ignoring international law. So very 00:03:11.810 --> 00:03:16.450 briefly, I've just listed some of the most crucial or core conventions that protect 00:03:16.450 --> 00:03:21.450 human rights from the U.N. Universal Declaration of Human Rights to the UN 00:03:21.450 --> 00:03:27.060 Convention Against Torture. And of course, the UN Convention relating to the Status 00:03:27.060 --> 00:03:31.890 of Refugees and its protocol. I'm also mentioning the Rome Statute of the 00:03:31.890 --> 00:03:36.750 International Criminal Court, because this is a court where this court itself is now 00:03:36.750 --> 00:03:41.550 being attacked by states around the world, nations around the world. I'm also 00:03:41.550 --> 00:03:48.070 mentioning customary international law, which is an international norm, where due 00:03:48.070 --> 00:03:55.381 to practice, the practice becomes so pervasive that countries no need, no 00:03:55.381 --> 00:04:01.230 longer need to sign up to an international treaty. That treaty becomes part of 00:04:01.230 --> 00:04:08.300 customary law. It doesn't have to be written anywhere. Now, the core document 00:04:08.300 --> 00:04:15.660 I'm going to discuss is the Refugee Convention and Article 33 and some are sub 00:04:15.660 --> 00:04:21.820 paragraph one is the core. It's the core part of refugee protection and that is no 00:04:21.820 --> 00:04:32.160 state shall expel return. And the legal word is refoul means to return. So no 00:04:32.160 --> 00:04:36.449 state is going to should return any refugee. And that also includes any 00:04:36.449 --> 00:04:42.539 refugee claimant out of their jurisdiction where their life or freedom are at risk, 00:04:42.539 --> 00:04:49.520 and that the life and freedom also includes any serious harm. And there 00:04:49.520 --> 00:04:56.839 are five fundamental grounds to secure refugee status, race, religion, 00:04:56.839 --> 00:05:02.479 nationality and political opinion. These are the classical four. There's a fifth 00:05:02.479 --> 00:05:07.000 called social group. And it's not a closed end category. It's actually open 00:05:07.000 --> 00:05:13.469 ended because as you know, over time, we recognize that different human rights 00:05:13.469 --> 00:05:18.320 abuses occur affecting different social groups that don't fall into the four 00:05:18.320 --> 00:05:27.629 classic categories. So just a review just to interpret Article 33. As I 00:05:27.629 --> 00:05:33.400 mentioned, liberty and life also includes serious harm. It's a forward looking test. 00:05:33.400 --> 00:05:37.600 So if an asylum seeker or refugee crosses a border into another country, they don't 00:05:37.600 --> 00:05:47.189 need to prove that they actually suffered any harm or any threats or any risks or 00:05:47.189 --> 00:05:50.979 any threats or harms or loss of liberty or serious harm before they leave their 00:05:50.979 --> 00:05:56.879 jurisdiction into another jurisdiction. That person has to show they're unable or 00:05:56.879 --> 00:06:01.299 unwilling to seek help from the police or the state. And that's quite often the case 00:06:01.299 --> 00:06:06.509 because of corruption or the state itself is the persecutor. And there must be a 00:06:06.509 --> 00:06:18.239 nexus to one of the five grounds. I'm going to focus on political opinion and 00:06:18.239 --> 00:06:23.159 political opinion can be expressed by an individual verbally through their physical 00:06:23.159 --> 00:06:31.090 actions. The presence with others and political opinion is connected to the 00:06:31.090 --> 00:06:34.499 right of freedom of expression. And one thing I would stress is that freedom of 00:06:34.499 --> 00:06:39.270 expression under the law is not just your right to say something. It's also your 00:06:39.270 --> 00:06:43.099 right to receive information, to be present, to be able to hear and listen or 00:06:43.099 --> 00:06:48.949 record. And the freedom of expression connects fundamentally to freedom of 00:06:48.949 --> 00:07:02.429 association, assembly and mobility. Lot of people misunderstand that persecution for 00:07:02.429 --> 00:07:09.019 political opinion is the persecutor. Is that the opinion comes from the persecuted 00:07:09.019 --> 00:07:17.779 person. In fact. The Refugee Convention clearly states, it is the opinion of the 00:07:17.779 --> 00:07:25.429 persecutor that counts. So, for example, I've had clients from South Asia. One case 00:07:25.429 --> 00:07:30.580 was of a farmer who just had no political opinion, but was at a rally in a public 00:07:30.580 --> 00:07:34.860 place and just was standing on a corner and was unaware there was a political 00:07:34.860 --> 00:07:42.619 opponent standing near him. Those in power saw my client. Inferred that my client 00:07:42.619 --> 00:07:47.830 must be supporting the opposition. And from that day onward, persecuted him, 00:07:47.830 --> 00:07:52.879 burned down his house, destroyed his farm and he fled for his life. So the legal 00:07:52.879 --> 00:08:05.199 test is the opinion or the perception of the persecutory. Now, I'd like to go to 00:08:05.199 --> 00:08:09.479 the social group category. This is really important, because this relates to some of 00:08:09.479 --> 00:08:14.590 my clients and in particular the Snowden refugees. And a social group is a 00:08:14.590 --> 00:08:19.330 particular group of people that are connected or linked through a shared 00:08:19.330 --> 00:08:26.059 characteristic or there's a perception by society that they, you know, having 00:08:26.059 --> 00:08:33.010 certain characteristics that they form a group. These characteristics are typically 00:08:33.010 --> 00:08:39.060 historical and relate fundamentally to an individual's identity and conscience. 00:08:39.060 --> 00:08:44.150 Usually they're unchangeable. And if they're not unchangeable, that person 00:08:44.150 --> 00:08:49.200 should not have to change those character characteristics, because they are 00:08:49.200 --> 00:08:54.700 fundamental to their identity or conscience. If they can be changed, they 00:08:54.700 --> 00:08:58.100 still should not be changed because they're linked to that person's 00:08:58.100 --> 00:09:03.400 fundamental exercise of human rights. The Snowden refugees fall into the social 00:09:03.400 --> 00:09:09.410 group category. Aside from having claims with Hong Kong and the Canadian government 00:09:09.410 --> 00:09:14.720 under political opinion for supporting helping Mr. Snowden, they form the unique 00:09:14.720 --> 00:09:19.080 social group that I think everyone in the world recognizes. They are the Snowden 00:09:19.080 --> 00:09:25.010 refugees and the social group are individuals that protect whistleblowers. 00:09:25.010 --> 00:09:35.520 That's the social category. Applause 00:09:35.520 --> 00:09:42.240 One thing I'll stress is that we hear about whistleblowers and public support 00:09:42.240 --> 00:09:47.530 for whistleblowers, not protection. Public support for journalists to carry out their 00:09:47.530 --> 00:09:55.120 duties. Quite often working or reporting, what whistleblowers want to disclose. But 00:09:55.120 --> 00:10:00.260 there is not enough in, in terms of legal applications, there's not enough in terms 00:10:00.260 --> 00:10:07.370 of public awareness, the importance of the average individual on the street, anybody 00:10:07.370 --> 00:10:11.500 on the street who may one day be faced with, what the Snowden refugees were faced 00:10:11.500 --> 00:10:18.370 with and make extraordinary decisions of conscience to help a whistleblower. I'm 00:10:18.370 --> 00:10:24.440 mentioning the CAT Convention, the United Nations Convention of Torture. Torture is 00:10:24.440 --> 00:10:29.420 a non-derogable right. It's not to be tortured is a non-derogable right. There 00:10:29.420 --> 00:10:35.800 is no circumstances that exist that can justify any state or private party 00:10:35.800 --> 00:10:42.660 torturing an individual. And I also mentioned the International Covenant on 00:10:42.660 --> 00:10:51.110 Civil and Political Rights and 3, 3 core rights here are the right to life and that 00:10:51.110 --> 00:10:59.270 it should not be arbitrarily taken. Tortures repeated here, but also cruel, 00:10:59.270 --> 00:11:02.960 inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment. And this is a a non-derogable 00:11:02.960 --> 00:11:08.500 right. No one should ever be subjected to this. And then the last one I'm going to 00:11:08.500 --> 00:11:13.860 mention, I apologize, is liberty and security in particular, arbitrary arrest 00:11:13.860 --> 00:11:18.750 and arbitrary detention. And as we see globally today, countries around the world 00:11:18.750 --> 00:11:23.320 where there's mass protests against government corruption, government abuses, 00:11:23.320 --> 00:11:27.450 a lack of freedoms. Governments are arbitrarily using arbitrary arrest and 00:11:27.450 --> 00:11:37.650 detention to make people disappear. To shut them up. No need to mention or point 00:11:37.650 --> 00:11:44.280 to the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. And in there, as well as Article 00:11:44.280 --> 00:11:50.740 31 of the Refugee Convention, that every refugee claimant has an absolute right to 00:11:50.740 --> 00:11:57.600 cross a border if they're at risk of losing their liberty, their life or 00:11:57.600 --> 00:12:03.530 serious harm. And unfortunately, we're living in a world today where countries 00:12:03.530 --> 00:12:12.140 and around the world are putting up walls that are real, walls that are virtual. 00:12:12.140 --> 00:12:16.150 Because they do not want to address or comply with their international 00:12:16.150 --> 00:12:21.810 obligations to help the most vulnerable. And what nation states are doing is 00:12:21.810 --> 00:12:28.100 they're using propaganda, inaccurate information, false information to 00:12:28.100 --> 00:12:33.430 criminalize legitimate asylum seekers and refugees, to try to categorize them as 00:12:33.430 --> 00:12:43.880 illegal immigrants, economic migrants. And with all of this, we're seeing an erosion 00:12:43.880 --> 00:12:49.320 of international law and constitutional law. And one area where nations have been 00:12:49.320 --> 00:12:56.301 very clever is they've been using the strategy of constructive refoulement. Now 00:12:56.301 --> 00:13:04.610 refoulement means to return. And in Hong Kong, for example, the government achieves 00:13:04.610 --> 00:13:08.290 constructive refoulement, which basically means, they create an environment that 00:13:08.290 --> 00:13:12.880 makes it intolerable for an individual to remain in that jurisdiction. And that in 00:13:12.880 --> 00:13:16.880 the end, that person's mental and physical integrity is so compromised, they make a 00:13:16.880 --> 00:13:20.830 decision to return their home country to take a risk. So whether they're going to 00:13:20.830 --> 00:13:25.670 live or die or lose their liberty or not. So in Hong Kong, for example, the 00:13:25.670 --> 00:13:30.480 government does not provide full humanitarian assistance. They criminalize 00:13:30.480 --> 00:13:40.050 work. There's no education allowed for adults. And employment is prohibited so 00:13:40.050 --> 00:13:45.250 that there's no way for the individual to be making money or participating in a 00:13:45.250 --> 00:13:50.230 meaningful way in society. And in the end, that person becomes so compromised, they 00:13:50.230 --> 00:13:55.130 decide to leave. The governments create these circumstances to violate their 00:13:55.130 --> 00:14:01.180 constitutional rights, international equal rights, by making them leave, by making 00:14:01.180 --> 00:14:06.440 the circumstances intolerable. You're seeing a global trend of criminalization 00:14:06.440 --> 00:14:12.960 and ill treatment of asylum seekers. You've seen similar legislative and policy 00:14:12.960 --> 00:14:20.570 and propaganda frameworks in Austria, Denmark and Hungary. We've all seen the 00:14:20.570 --> 00:14:25.470 asylum seekers who've lost their lives crossing the Mediterranean. In the United 00:14:25.470 --> 00:14:31.470 States we've seen separation of children separated from families, a tactic used by 00:14:31.470 --> 00:14:37.250 the US government. The children held in detention centers, deprived of blankets, 00:14:37.250 --> 00:14:44.010 soap, toothpaste, a lack of monitoring and care for the welfare and health of these 00:14:44.010 --> 00:14:48.870 children. Some have died and more recently. And this is a tactic also used 00:14:48.870 --> 00:14:54.320 by the Hong Kong government, but in a different way. Asylum seekers who are 00:14:54.320 --> 00:14:58.680 outside the U.S. jurisdiction, the immigration officers put incorrect 00:14:58.680 --> 00:15:04.560 addresses recorded in the system, so that they cannot receive legal notifications 00:15:04.560 --> 00:15:10.430 from the U.S. government. You've seen the same thing in Hong Kong. I know firsthand. 00:15:10.430 --> 00:15:14.350 I've seen asylum seekers go to the immigration and removal assessment 00:15:14.350 --> 00:15:19.750 section, try to hand in a document stating that they're raising a claim as a 00:15:19.750 --> 00:15:24.820 protection claimant for refugee status or torture. And there are security guards at 00:15:24.820 --> 00:15:29.980 the door that basic that tell them go away. It's not acceptable. Not immigration 00:15:29.980 --> 00:15:37.880 officers. And if they do manage to submit raising their refugee asylum claims, I've 00:15:37.880 --> 00:15:41.310 I've had too many clients, who've been told you're not using the right words to 00:15:41.310 --> 00:15:44.730 raise a claim that you're afraid you're gonna die or you're afraid you're going to 00:15:44.730 --> 00:15:50.300 be hurt. So these are tactics that deny, what I would describe, the due process 00:15:50.300 --> 00:16:03.170 rights of these votes, this vulnerable groups. And I do want to mention Thailand 00:16:03.170 --> 00:16:06.980 in terms of the treatment of asylum seekers. And that they have found mass 00:16:06.980 --> 00:16:14.460 graves in Thailand has been complicit in human trafficking of the Rohingya. Now, 00:16:14.460 --> 00:16:21.381 there's a few quotes I'd like to to read, and this is from the former U.N. high 00:16:21.381 --> 00:16:27.890 commissioner for Human Rights. And it was right for us -not just to have remembered 00:16:27.890 --> 00:16:31.890 Mandela's greatness, but to have almost unconsciously contrasted it with all the 00:16:31.890 --> 00:16:36.260 narrow politicians, who continue to proliferate across the face of the world. 00:16:36.260 --> 00:16:41.360 Authoritarian in nature, many of them are wily political in-fighters, but most are 00:16:41.360 --> 00:16:47.130 of the thin mind and faint humanity, prone to fan division and intolerance. And just 00:16:47.130 --> 00:16:51.520 for the sake of securing their political ambition, while some do this more openly 00:16:51.520 --> 00:16:56.070 than others, all are well aware what they practice comes at the expense of 00:16:56.070 --> 00:17:04.650 vulnerable humans. And the U.N. high commissioner goes on to state to them, I 00:17:04.650 --> 00:17:08.660 say you may seize power or stubbornly hold onto it, by playing on and stoking the 00:17:08.660 --> 00:17:12.410 fears of your followers. You may congratulate yourselves for this and you 00:17:12.410 --> 00:17:16.799 may think yourself so clever for it. But we know all you've done is to copy the 00:17:16.799 --> 00:17:21.089 behavior of previous generations of once strong but ultimately catastrophic, 00:17:21.089 --> 00:17:25.529 leaders and politicians. Yours will, in the end, become a mouse like global 00:17:25.529 --> 00:17:29.639 reputation, never the fine example of the leader you think you are, and never even 00:17:29.639 --> 00:17:42.170 close to a Mandela. Applause 00:17:42.170 --> 00:17:45.879 To deserve global respect, you must begin to follow his example---committing to the 00:17:45.879 --> 00:17:51.029 spirit and letter of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Hong Kong 00:17:51.029 --> 00:17:54.630 does not recognize the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Hong Kong 00:17:54.630 --> 00:18:04.340 doesn't recognize the UN convention relating to the Status of Refugees. 00:18:04.340 --> 00:18:09.879 Michelle Bachelet, the current U.N. high commissioner, she stated early this year 00:18:09.879 --> 00:18:13.299 "the report outlines our efforts to assist States to uphold all human rights, at a 00:18:13.299 --> 00:18:18.970 time when humanity faces many serious challenges. These include the existential 00:18:18.970 --> 00:18:25.299 threat of climate change; technological developments: unbearable civilian 00:18:25.299 --> 00:18:28.460 suffering in multiple armed conflicts, displacement, youth unemployment, 00:18:28.460 --> 00:18:33.070 structural economic injustices, xenophobia and hate speech, and -- a focus on my 00:18:33.070 --> 00:18:43.940 statement today --- gross inequalities". Me specially continues focusing on these 00:18:43.940 --> 00:18:52.639 inequalities and I'm just going to read at the bottom. Yet in several cases they are 00:18:52.639 --> 00:18:56.260 being met with violent and excessive use of force, arbitrary detentions, torture, 00:18:56.260 --> 00:19:01.390 even alleged summary extrajudicial killings. People are protesting. People 00:19:01.390 --> 00:19:07.120 are protesting at the behavior of government and authoritarian leaders. And 00:19:07.120 --> 00:19:12.120 I put my mind to how to describe what's going on. And in the best way I've been 00:19:12.120 --> 00:19:17.110 able to describe it is, that these authoritarian leaders, democratic, 00:19:17.110 --> 00:19:29.980 elected, have become unhinged, disconnected from from the populace. And 00:19:29.980 --> 00:19:39.429 most recently, especially as talked about global protests, and she stated just a few 00:19:39.429 --> 00:19:43.080 months ago, I fear that we are moving farther away, further away from the global 00:19:43.080 --> 00:19:46.990 solutions to the global problems due to two clear trends that are taking us in the 00:19:46.990 --> 00:19:50.990 opposite directions. Today, in places with very different circumstances, level of 00:19:50.990 --> 00:19:54.450 development and political situations, we're seeing an outpouring of popular 00:19:54.450 --> 00:19:59.679 discontent and mass protests or their suppression with the firm hand of the 00:19:59.679 --> 00:20:07.529 state in every region. And Hong Kong is included in here and I'll just part move 00:20:07.529 --> 00:20:13.149 forward. We see the desperate need for dialog. The use of unnecessary and 00:20:13.149 --> 00:20:16.470 disproportionate force against people holding dissenting views 00:20:16.470 --> 00:20:19.529 and arrests of individuals exercising their rights to freedom of expression and 00:20:19.529 --> 00:20:25.119 peaceful assembly can only exacerbate tensions, seriously undermining the space 00:20:25.119 --> 00:20:37.570 for dialog. In my view, we are in crisis. There is a global crisis. What I thought I 00:20:37.570 --> 00:20:45.400 would do is to give some tangible examples through the casework I do. Narendra Modi. 00:20:45.400 --> 00:20:49.629 His platform has been Hindu nationalism, and that's been at the expense of 00:20:49.629 --> 00:20:55.060 religious minorities and ethnic minorities in India. In particular, the Muslim 00:20:55.060 --> 00:21:02.930 population. And what Modi has done and this is this is a thread that runs through 00:21:02.930 --> 00:21:06.519 what happens in other jurisdictions, including Hong Kong, is when you have 00:21:06.519 --> 00:21:11.840 nationalism and minorities are targeted by the government or they're discriminated 00:21:11.840 --> 00:21:18.750 against. Third parties in the private sector or related to politicians act on 00:21:18.750 --> 00:21:23.570 their own. And when the state allows that to happen, we call that state 00:21:23.570 --> 00:21:33.559 acquiescence. And in India, that's what we're seeing. Back here. Recently, there 00:21:33.559 --> 00:21:42.320 was a deprivation of citizenship of 1.9 million people in Assam state, an 00:21:42.320 --> 00:21:48.049 arbitrary act by Modi's government. And as of last week, there was a new bill enacted 00:21:48.049 --> 00:21:52.409 into law, granting citizenship to Hindus, Buddhists and Christians from certain 00:21:52.409 --> 00:21:59.549 Southeast Asian countries. But it excludes Muslims and it also excludes the Sri 00:21:59.549 --> 00:22:07.149 Lankan Tamils, for which there is a huge number of refugees, who had fled from Sri 00:22:07.149 --> 00:22:16.159 Lanka. And what Modi has done is all contrary to Article 15 up to 28, and 00:22:16.159 --> 00:22:19.710 that's prohibition of discrimination based on religion, race and 00:22:19.710 --> 00:22:25.269 place of birth. The tactics used by governments today in doing what Modi has 00:22:25.269 --> 00:22:33.230 done, it's being used all over the world. The executive branch for the legislator 00:22:33.230 --> 00:22:37.820 legislature passes legislation that's unconstitutional and it may take a year or 00:22:37.820 --> 00:22:44.191 two or three years before a court strikes it down. But during that gap period, those 00:22:44.191 --> 00:22:49.900 people who are discriminated against or persecuted suffer. Often they have to flee 00:22:49.900 --> 00:22:55.229 their homes. They had to flee their country or they're hurt or they're killed. 00:22:55.229 --> 00:23:01.639 So this is another way that democratically elected leaders are utilizing the 00:23:01.639 --> 00:23:05.519 government and the legal system to strip away constitutional rights and rights 00:23:05.519 --> 00:23:14.139 line:1 under international law. Sri Lanka, extraordinarily good by Rajapaksa, accused 00:23:14.139 --> 00:23:18.080 of war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide, was elected as Sri Lanka's new 00:23:18.080 --> 00:23:26.850 president just a month ago. In 1987 to 1988, 1990, he was the commanding officer 00:23:26.850 --> 00:23:33.650 in charge of the Mottola district, where about eight years ago they found mass 00:23:33.650 --> 00:23:39.539 graves. In 2009, he was accused of war crimes, crimes against humanity and 00:23:39.539 --> 00:23:44.570 genocide. At the end of the war bombing, hospitals, civilian hospitals where they 00:23:44.570 --> 00:23:52.869 were Tamils, actually judicial killings, summary executions. And the 00:23:52.869 --> 00:24:05.389 platform of Rutter Rajapaksa was based on ethnicity and nationalism. And the 00:24:05.389 --> 00:24:14.460 Philippines. Duterte came to power in 2016. It was on the platform that he would 00:24:14.460 --> 00:24:19.760 carry out mass extrajudicial killings against drug addicts and drug traffickers. 00:24:19.760 --> 00:24:25.580 He had done that when he was mayor of Davao City in southern Philippines. And in 00:24:25.580 --> 00:24:31.190 June 2016, when he took power as president of the country, he did exactly that to 00:24:31.190 --> 00:24:37.489 over 20.000 Philipinos executed. The president, the Philippines, the government 00:24:37.489 --> 00:24:43.759 have threatened NGO, human rights activists, ethnic minorities, Catholic 00:24:43.759 --> 00:24:50.720 Church and even U.N. special rapporteurs. And stunningly Duterte was actually 00:24:50.720 --> 00:24:58.450 filmed. This was televised, where he in his campaign and basically committing 00:24:58.450 --> 00:25:02.980 crimes against humanity. He said "If Germany had Hitler, the Philippines would 00:25:02.980 --> 00:25:08.960 have. He said, pausing and pointing to himself. Hitler massacred three million 00:25:08.960 --> 00:25:18.090 Jews. There's three million drug addicts, there are. I'd be happy to slaughter them. 00:25:18.090 --> 00:25:28.720 And a year later, Donald Trump congratulated Duterte on his war on drugs. 00:25:28.720 --> 00:25:34.039 U.N. Special Rapporteur on the rights of indigenous people, Victoria Tauli-Corpuz. 00:25:34.039 --> 00:25:37.739 She fled the jurisdiction because the tar tape put her on a her name on a terrorist 00:25:37.739 --> 00:25:46.119 line:1 list. This is about state acquiescence to human rights violations when a government 00:25:46.119 --> 00:25:52.191 puts an individual's name on a list. And what happened in the Philippines? Private 00:25:52.191 --> 00:25:55.840 parties took the law into their own hands and executed a number of people, 00:25:55.840 --> 00:25:59.941 assassinated them. So that was the fear for the UN special rapporteur, and she 00:25:59.941 --> 00:26:07.110 fled the jurisdiction. Complaints were filed with the International Criminal 00:26:07.110 --> 00:26:17.489 Court for crimes against humanity against Duterte. And also this UN special 00:26:17.489 --> 00:26:25.379 rapporteur, Agnes Kellerman on summary and extradition killings. Both the 00:26:25.379 --> 00:26:29.009 International Criminal Court prosecutor was threatened by Duterte and also the UN 00:26:29.009 --> 00:26:36.659 Special Rapporteur. Most significantly, the ICC prosecutor was threatened with 00:26:36.659 --> 00:26:41.280 arrest, if she came to the Philippines to investigate. She'd be assaulted and she'd 00:26:41.280 --> 00:26:48.799 be killed. She'd be fed to the crocodiles. Philippines officially withdrew from the 00:26:48.799 --> 00:26:58.099 International Criminal Court, but that still does not protect President Duterte. 00:26:58.099 --> 00:27:02.689 Duterte may have committed possible war crimes. I've mentioned a few here, 00:27:02.689 --> 00:27:10.850 particularly calling for horrific crimes to be committed against women. And the 00:27:10.850 --> 00:27:15.031 People's Republic of China has been a great supporter of Duterte today, and it's 00:27:15.031 --> 00:27:19.259 understood that, because of the provisions under the Rome Statute for the 00:27:19.259 --> 00:27:25.149 International Criminal Court, that Duterte would not be prosecuted. China would use 00:27:25.149 --> 00:27:29.580 its veto power in the International Criminal Court to prevent any prosecution 00:27:29.580 --> 00:27:38.759 of him. Again, this is an example of how states are interfering with violating or 00:27:38.759 --> 00:27:48.229 making international law useless. The People's Republic of China, the most 00:27:48.229 --> 00:27:52.489 pressing example are the current concentration or detention camps in China. 00:27:52.489 --> 00:27:59.010 line:1 Of the Uighur Muslims, and despite the China cable, satellite images and 00:27:59.010 --> 00:28:04.700 witnesses, China denies that they've arbitrarily arrested, arbitrarily detained 00:28:04.700 --> 00:28:13.910 line:1 and disappeared over a million from [unaudible] Xinjiang provice. 00:28:13.910 --> 00:28:19.679 I'd like to mention Hong Kong very briefly, and Hong Kong has had a 00:28:19.679 --> 00:28:26.960 history of violating its own constitution and international law. From the Sami al- 00:28:26.960 --> 00:28:32.149 Saadi extraordinary rendition, where Hong Kong deprived Mr. Saudi of all his due 00:28:32.149 --> 00:28:36.509 process rights and its protections under international law and handed him over the 00:28:36.509 --> 00:28:43.130 UK and U.S. government on a rendition flight in 2004. And that was the incident 00:28:43.130 --> 00:28:48.369 that put fear that made, that gave me great concern when Mr. Snowden was in Hong 00:28:48.369 --> 00:28:53.590 Kong, that the Hong Kong government could not be trusted to uphold its constitution, 00:28:53.590 --> 00:29:05.489 to uphold international law. 2014 Occupy protests, Ken Tsang, a politician. He was 00:29:05.489 --> 00:29:10.700 hold tied, hands tied behind his back and his legs and tortured by the police, and 00:29:10.700 --> 00:29:18.410 it was caught on video and these officers were convicted, but then they compared 00:29:18.410 --> 00:29:23.220 them, the police compared themselves to being persecuted as the Jewish people had 00:29:23.220 --> 00:29:33.489 during the Holocaust. And that's on video that's been publicly recorded. And 2018 00:29:33.489 --> 00:29:38.649 Allen Lee and Ray Wong fled Hong Kong in fear for their liberty and their and their 00:29:38.649 --> 00:29:43.859 safety, and they were granted refugee status by the German government, which was 00:29:43.859 --> 00:29:48.759 the right thing to do. And this caused a lot of outrage of the Hong Kong government 00:29:48.759 --> 00:29:54.710 and Beijing. And right now we have the Hong Kong protests, including arbitrary 00:29:54.710 --> 00:29:58.280 arrest, arbitrary detention, cruel and inhuman or degrading treatment and 00:29:58.280 --> 00:30:03.279 punishment, torture, enforced disappearances, cases of rape by the 00:30:03.279 --> 00:30:16.539 police and actual extrajudicial killings. I'm going to skip this. I still have 00:30:16.539 --> 00:30:21.369 clients, my clients in Hong Kong, Snowden refugees, and fortunately this March, 00:30:21.369 --> 00:30:27.710 March of this year, Vanessa O'Dell and her daughter Keana safely arrived in Canada, 00:30:27.710 --> 00:30:40.349 having been granted refugee status. Applause 00:30:40.349 --> 00:30:47.330 This was a seven and a half year battle, seven and a half years, and one thing I'll 00:30:47.330 --> 00:30:54.959 say is that so many people gave up, so many people said to me, you're not going 00:30:54.959 --> 00:31:01.889 to win. It's taken too long. What? Why don't you just move on with other cases? 00:31:01.889 --> 00:31:07.779 Anyways, I believed that we'd be successful. And we have. 00:31:07.779 --> 00:31:26.649 Applause Keana, in this photo, this is Keana on her 00:31:26.649 --> 00:31:33.740 father's lap. And her father is still in Hong Kong with her brother and sister. 00:31:33.740 --> 00:31:43.259 Satyam de and Denath, and we would like to see this family being reunited in Canada 00:31:43.259 --> 00:31:54.809 and we're asking Canada to act fast, as fast as possible. She has a sister who 00:31:54.809 --> 00:32:00.840 only thinks about in Hong Kong something, who only thinks about being reunited with 00:32:00.840 --> 00:32:06.460 Keana in Montreal. And at this time, with the with the police abuses, the government 00:32:06.460 --> 00:32:12.190 abuses in Hong Kong Sethumdi she has been traumatized and she suffered permanent 00:32:12.190 --> 00:32:17.129 damage. The whole family is afraid. They live in fear and they are at heightened 00:32:17.129 --> 00:32:24.779 risk with the lawlessness in Hong Kong. The lawlessness by the Hong Kong police. I 00:32:24.779 --> 00:32:29.320 just want to share this picture, which was taken by Jane Russell in August this year. 00:32:29.320 --> 00:32:34.250 This is the Hong Kong Police Tactical Unit in Fanling. And you'll notice that there's 00:32:34.250 --> 00:32:43.409 no Hong Kong flag. And Jane Russell, photojournalist, pointed this out. And it 00:32:43.409 --> 00:32:48.809 was at that point we all realized that the hand of Beijing was apparently acting 00:32:48.809 --> 00:33:03.679 directly inside Hong Kong. Directing the Hong Kong police. What's happened in Hong 00:33:03.679 --> 00:33:12.329 Kong, is the same thing that you see in Sri Lanka, in Bangladesh, Pakistan, India, 00:33:12.329 --> 00:33:18.539 where the government allows the police to commit abuses state sanctioned or the 00:33:18.539 --> 00:33:22.629 police commit abuses and the government turns a blind eye. And that amounts to 00:33:22.629 --> 00:33:27.249 state acquiescence. And what's happened in Hong Kong is, what you see classically in 00:33:27.249 --> 00:33:32.669 Sri Lanka or the Philippines, where third private parties take the law into their 00:33:32.669 --> 00:33:39.759 own hands and go after innocent civilians or peaceful protesters. Hong Kong has 00:33:39.759 --> 00:33:46.119 become a very dangerous place today. And my clients lives are at risk, at a 00:33:46.119 --> 00:33:56.720 heightened risk. I thought I would share this image taken by Keana's father of 00:33:56.720 --> 00:34:03.789 line:1 [inaudible] during the protests. And this is what these children are 00:34:03.789 --> 00:34:13.990 growing up in this kind of environment right now. Where really where they should 00:34:13.990 --> 00:34:24.330 be, is in this environment. And this is Vanessa and Keana in Montreal, Quebec, not 00:34:24.330 --> 00:34:33.130 just earlier this month. Now, what I'd like to do in saying that is I'd like to 00:34:33.130 --> 00:35:26.070 invite Mr. Snowden to join us. Dom. Check. Edward Snowden: Can anyone hear me? Thank 00:35:26.070 --> 00:35:27.070 you. Applause 00:35:27.070 --> 00:35:33.250 We have very little time. So let me first give thanks to Robert Tibbo. I know it's 00:35:33.250 --> 00:35:40.920 not always fun for Rudy to sit through, what is effectively a long lecture about 00:35:40.920 --> 00:35:45.180 what's wrong with the world. But these things matter and it's important that we 00:35:45.180 --> 00:35:51.940 remember how they get better. I've been thinking a lot this year and writing my 00:35:51.940 --> 00:35:58.390 book, Permanent Record and after about the state of the world and the direction of 00:35:58.390 --> 00:36:01.480 our future. laughing 00:36:01.480 --> 00:36:06.490 I trust that each of you will understand that in 2019 this was not an especially 00:36:06.490 --> 00:36:12.650 enjoyable activity, but it's necessary. And one of the bright spots for me in this 00:36:12.650 --> 00:36:20.990 increasingly dark world has been the fact that people like you, that CCC has 00:36:20.990 --> 00:36:27.020 supported these families over the last few years. They made a difference for me. 00:36:27.020 --> 00:36:29.830 Think think about, what would have happened if I wouldn't have been able to 00:36:29.830 --> 00:36:33.520 get off the street. Think about what might have happened to me. I think about the 00:36:33.520 --> 00:36:37.040 fact that I wouldn't be able to talk to you today and all these years since the 00:36:37.040 --> 00:36:44.840 book that I wrote would not exist. It might seem like a small thing, you know, 00:36:44.840 --> 00:36:49.130 to you, to it to give a donation to help out. But I believe that it really has 00:36:49.130 --> 00:36:56.260 genuinely changed the future of these brave families in a positive way. And so 00:36:56.260 --> 00:37:01.210 when I'm thinking about everything that's broken in the world. It got me thinking 00:37:01.210 --> 00:37:05.800 about the lessons that can be taken from them and how they fit into a larger 00:37:05.800 --> 00:37:11.870 framework. We have pretty limited time here. So I'm going to do something a 00:37:11.870 --> 00:37:20.741 little bit unusual to try to summarize and read a little passage from the book. What 00:37:20.741 --> 00:37:28.390 makes a life? It's more than what we say. More even than what we do. A life is also 00:37:28.390 --> 00:37:34.880 about what we love and what we believe in. For me, what I love and believe in the 00:37:34.880 --> 00:37:41.020 most is connection, human connection and the technologies by which that's achieved. 00:37:41.020 --> 00:37:44.480 Those technologies include books, of course. But for my generation, connection 00:37:44.480 --> 00:37:50.120 has largely met the Internet. Now, before a lot of you recoil, knowing how broken 00:37:50.120 --> 00:37:54.560 the Internet, the toxic madness that's all over it. I understand that for me, as it 00:37:54.560 --> 00:37:58.600 was for, I believe many of you, when I came to know it. The Internet was a very 00:37:58.600 --> 00:38:03.360 different thing. It was a friend and a parent. It was a community without borders 00:38:03.360 --> 00:38:09.440 or limit. One voice and millions, a common frontier that had been settled, but not 00:38:09.440 --> 00:38:15.130 exploited by diverse tribes living amicably enough side by side. Each member 00:38:15.130 --> 00:38:22.710 which was free to choose their own name and history and culture. Everyone wore 00:38:22.710 --> 00:38:29.700 masks. And yet this culture of anonymity through polyanomy produced more truth and 00:38:29.700 --> 00:38:34.770 falsehood, because it was creative and cooperative rather than commercial and 00:38:34.770 --> 00:38:40.930 competitive. Certainly there was conflict, but it was outweighed by goodwill and good 00:38:40.930 --> 00:38:47.241 feelings. The true pioneering spirit. You'll understand why I say, that the 00:38:47.241 --> 00:38:51.850 internet today is in many ways unrecognizable. It's worth noting that 00:38:51.850 --> 00:38:58.060 this change has been a conscious choice, the result of a systematic effort on the 00:38:58.060 --> 00:39:05.550 part of a privileged few. The early rush to turn commerce into e-commerce quickly 00:39:05.550 --> 00:39:11.670 led to a bubble and then, just after the term of the millennium, to a collapse. 00:39:11.670 --> 00:39:15.070 After that, companies realized that people who went online were far less interested 00:39:15.070 --> 00:39:22.490 in spending than in sharing, and that the human connection, the internet made possible, 00:39:22.490 --> 00:39:28.800 could be monetized. If most of what people wanted to do online, was to be able to 00:39:28.800 --> 00:39:33.700 tell their family and their friends and strangers what they were up to and to be 00:39:33.700 --> 00:39:38.060 told what their family, friends and strangers were up to in return, then all 00:39:38.060 --> 00:39:41.930 companies had to do to figure out how to put them was figure out how to put 00:39:41.930 --> 00:39:47.551 themselves in the middle of those social exchanges and turn them into profit. This 00:39:47.551 --> 00:39:54.600 was the beginning of surveying capitalism and the end of the Internet, as I know it 00:39:54.600 --> 00:40:00.210 now. It was the creative web that collapsed as countless beautiful, 00:40:00.210 --> 00:40:05.630 difficult, individualized web sites were shuttered. The promise of convenience led 00:40:05.630 --> 00:40:09.520 people to exchange their personal sites, which demanded constant and laborious 00:40:09.520 --> 00:40:15.100 upkeep. As you are known for a Facebook page and a Gmail account, the appearance 00:40:15.100 --> 00:40:22.860 of ownership was easy to mistake for the reality of it. But few of us understood it 00:40:22.860 --> 00:40:31.030 at the time. None of the things that we go on to share would belong to us anymore. 00:40:31.030 --> 00:40:35.100 The successors to the emerge commerce companies that had failed because they 00:40:35.100 --> 00:40:43.500 couldn't find anything to sell, that we were interested in. They now had a new 00:40:43.500 --> 00:40:50.300 product to sell, and that product was us, our attention, our activities, our 00:40:50.300 --> 00:40:54.860 locations, our desires, everything about us, that we revealed knowingly or 00:40:54.860 --> 00:41:00.530 unknowingly, with or without consent, was being surveilled and sold in secret so as 00:41:00.530 --> 00:41:06.980 to delay the inevitable feeling violation that is for most of us arriving now. And 00:41:06.980 --> 00:41:11.450 this surveillance would go on to be actively encouraged and even funded by an 00:41:11.450 --> 00:41:15.410 army of governments greedy for the vast volume of intelligence that they would 00:41:15.410 --> 00:41:20.891 gain from these practices. Aside from logins and financial transactions, hardly any 00:41:20.891 --> 00:41:25.580 communications were encrypted in the early twenty aughts, which meant that in many 00:41:25.580 --> 00:41:30.960 cases governments didn't need to even bother approaching the companies that were 00:41:30.960 --> 00:41:36.520 running these platforms in order to know what their customers were doing. They 00:41:36.520 --> 00:41:46.800 could just spy on the world without telling a soul. And now I ask you, is this 00:41:46.800 --> 00:41:53.661 what the world should look like and how did this come to be? We were there. We 00:41:53.661 --> 00:42:00.130 were watching, and we thought we controlled the system. We thought we ran 00:42:00.130 --> 00:42:07.010 the system. We thought it was our Internet. But here we are. Surveillance, 00:42:07.010 --> 00:42:13.350 after all, is less about safety than it is about control. And when you look around at 00:42:13.350 --> 00:42:18.520 the union of technical and political systems today, it seems that they intend 00:42:18.520 --> 00:42:26.790 less to serve us than for us to serve them. And it's funny talking about this at 00:42:26.790 --> 00:42:36.180 CCC, because to me it it feels like a hack. You know what is hacking, I'm sure, 00:42:36.180 --> 00:42:42.390 all you guys have different definitions. But in my definition, it's not just 00:42:42.390 --> 00:42:49.570 programing. Of course, we wouldn't see terms like bio hacking. Hacking is about 00:42:49.570 --> 00:42:56.600 rules and the distance between how they are believed to operate and how they 00:42:56.600 --> 00:43:03.230 operate in fact. Hacking for me means, coming to understand a system better than 00:43:03.230 --> 00:43:10.960 its creators or its operators and using that understanding to produce impossible 00:43:10.960 --> 00:43:19.530 results, unexpected behavior. Thanks so much. Now we'd like to think about hacks 00:43:19.530 --> 00:43:25.560 in a positive light, but in the case of these last few decades, it's our society 00:43:25.560 --> 00:43:30.160 that was hacked. It is the whole of our network. It is the Internet itself, that 00:43:30.160 --> 00:43:38.010 they exploit. And you see that. That's the thing. The choices that we make and the 00:43:38.010 --> 00:43:47.850 things that you do. They have power and doing nothing, that that's a choice. Now, 00:43:47.850 --> 00:43:53.740 a lot of us like to think it's a willing choice. We'd like to think that we're the 00:43:53.740 --> 00:43:58.031 sole captains of our own destiny. And that's the way it's supposed to be. That's 00:43:58.031 --> 00:44:03.120 the way it was intended. That's the way we designed the system. And yet the system 00:44:03.120 --> 00:44:09.260 today. Somehow the actors within it spend an enormous amount of energy trying to 00:44:09.260 --> 00:44:14.680 make you forget, that the things you do affect the outcome. They'll tell you not 00:44:14.680 --> 00:44:19.780 to worry about it. That that it's not so bad after all. You know, it could be 00:44:19.780 --> 00:44:28.010 worse. But I say to you, it could be better. And every time we hear those 00:44:28.010 --> 00:44:34.310 words, that's what we need to say. Every system in history, even the most powerful, 00:44:34.310 --> 00:44:42.830 has been subject to change. And every hack that is performed against us, can face a 00:44:42.830 --> 00:44:50.880 patch and more in all of the trouble to which these people have gone, to to make 00:44:50.880 --> 00:44:55.910 the people broadly forget their own power, they have forgotten something that I think 00:44:55.910 --> 00:45:06.010 is fundamental. We can hack back. They run the system. They may have won today. But 00:45:06.010 --> 00:45:09.340 I've been thinking about this, look, we all know the history and it has been a 00:45:09.340 --> 00:45:17.020 dark time. But I'm here today in front of you to say that tomorrow will be ours. 00:45:17.020 --> 00:45:22.880 Change is coming and it is coming from people who pay attention. People who care. 00:45:22.880 --> 00:45:28.040 It will come from people like you, who took the time out of the day, out of their 00:45:28.040 --> 00:45:32.490 lives. The money out of their pocket to travel. The time, the minutes of your life 00:45:32.490 --> 00:45:42.140 to be here today, standing in solidarity, talking, learning, sharing to show that 00:45:42.140 --> 00:45:51.070 this broken world could very well be better. We can change it. We can change 00:45:51.070 --> 00:45:57.910 everything. One system, one rule at a time. Thank you. 00:45:57.910 --> 00:46:31.130 Applause I just hope it's not kind of I no longer 00:46:31.130 --> 00:46:33.770 have audio, so I'm afraid I won't be able to. 00:46:33.770 --> 00:46:37.560 Robert Tibbo: Ed, we've got Vanessa on the screen, half the screen with you right 00:46:37.560 --> 00:46:44.560 now. And she's, uh, she's on video live from Montreal. And can you... 00:46:44.560 --> 00:46:51.330 ES: Just if it's not clear I can't do anything even so, I'm a bystander now. I'm 00:46:51.330 --> 00:47:00.710 going to go to the stream and hopefully Robert and Vanessa can help us for the Q&A 00:47:00.710 --> 00:47:09.640 RT: Ed, do you want to do a Q&A right now or do you want to. They've lost that. All 00:47:09.640 --> 00:47:19.650 right, so, yeah. So Vanessa's in Montreal and I've invited here her here today. And 00:47:19.650 --> 00:47:26.610 so why don't we just start with a Q and A? This is this is really it's Vanessa's 00:47:26.610 --> 00:47:32.940 first year after a decade and a half of being under very difficult circumstances. 00:47:32.940 --> 00:47:45.280 Applause Herald: Also, you know the drill. We have 00:47:45.280 --> 00:47:49.330 microphones in the halls. Please line up behind them. If you have question for a 00:47:49.330 --> 00:47:56.830 Robert Tibbo or Vanessa and hopefully Mr. Snowden will join us again, I think we're 00:47:56.830 --> 00:48:04.900 working out the background. Do we have questions from the Internet so far? Yes, 00:48:04.900 --> 00:48:08.900 that is the case. So, Signal-Engel, please give us a question. 00:48:08.900 --> 00:48:12.220 Signal-Angel: Do you think that whistleblowing could have prevented 00:48:12.220 --> 00:48:17.280 fascist received regimes in the past and that it will be more important in the near 00:48:17.280 --> 00:48:26.970 future for the same reason? RT: Questions for me, I'm assuming. 00:48:26.970 --> 00:48:34.740 Whistleblowing has always occurred in the past and it has brought about change. 00:48:34.740 --> 00:48:40.400 Historically there, you know, there are recorded cases, but the difficulties in 00:48:40.400 --> 00:48:45.710 the past were the lack of protections. Quite often in whistleblowers had to leave 00:48:45.710 --> 00:48:52.780 the jurisdiction. They would end up being killed. And and really, it's only in 00:48:52.780 --> 00:48:59.520 recent history and in particular with with Edward Snowden's whistleblowing, that 00:48:59.520 --> 00:49:05.690 governments around the world, including the European Union as a whole, recognize 00:49:05.690 --> 00:49:12.280 that there needs to be change. There needs to be more protections. But we're also 00:49:12.280 --> 00:49:17.620 seeing that nations are providing enhanced whistleblower protections. But on the 00:49:17.620 --> 00:49:23.230 commercial civil side and they're still lagging significantly, where there's 00:49:23.230 --> 00:49:28.630 whistleblowing outing governments that behave egregiously or criminally, as in 00:49:28.630 --> 00:49:36.620 Mr. Snowden's case. So more than ever, whistleblowing will remain and will 00:49:36.620 --> 00:49:41.860 continue to be a crucial part of ensuring government accountability and 00:49:41.860 --> 00:49:47.270 transparency. But for whistleblowers to step forward, a couple of things have to 00:49:47.270 --> 00:49:52.880 happen. Society needs to be stepping up and demanding government that there be 00:49:52.880 --> 00:49:59.280 protections for whistleblowers, particularly like Mr. Snowden. And 00:49:59.280 --> 00:50:08.320 secondly, we've seen the government go after with the Snowden refugees and made 00:50:08.320 --> 00:50:16.510 their lives intolerable. There exists in existence intolerable in Hong Kong and the 00:50:16.510 --> 00:50:22.950 delay of so many years to get Vanessa and Keana on the screen now into Canada and 00:50:22.950 --> 00:50:28.750 the other families here in Hong Kong, who are suffering right now, was the the 00:50:28.750 --> 00:50:36.330 global leadership saying, don't protect a whistleblower, because this is what's 00:50:36.330 --> 00:50:44.070 gonna happen to you. So I hope that Vanessa and Keana's arrivaled refuge in 00:50:44.070 --> 00:50:49.580 Canada to safety and security, is an example for the whole world that there 00:50:49.580 --> 00:50:53.650 will be more whistleblowers. But there also needs to be people in the general 00:50:53.650 --> 00:50:59.480 population who say, look, we need to support them and to take steps to make 00:50:59.480 --> 00:51:03.430 whistle, make sure whistleblowers can remain safe, but also when democratic 00:51:03.430 --> 00:51:09.200 systems to put pressure on government, to make changes and whistleblower 00:51:09.200 --> 00:51:12.440 protections. Signal-Angel: Thank you a lot for the 00:51:12.440 --> 00:51:16.330 detailed answer. We have some more questions. But before we continue with 00:51:16.330 --> 00:51:21.270 them, I would like to ask all of you to stay seated and stay quiet. Some people 00:51:21.270 --> 00:51:25.820 are leaving already the hall. Please don't. And please stay quiet so we can 00:51:25.820 --> 00:51:31.510 enjoy the last minutes of this lovely Q and A. You can also ask questions to 00:51:31.510 --> 00:51:37.810 Vanessa, who played a crucial role in sheltering Mr. Snowden back in Hong Kong. 00:51:37.810 --> 00:51:43.220 And for now, I would like to hear a question from microphone number three. 00:51:43.220 --> 00:51:49.440 Mic 3: Hi. I'm [inaudible] Hi, I'm a Pakistani journalist in exile. So thank you for the 00:51:49.440 --> 00:51:57.200 talk. It's been super inspiring. My question to Vanessa is that looking back 00:51:57.200 --> 00:52:02.520 now that you everything that you suffer. Would you say that if you were given a 00:52:02.520 --> 00:52:08.300 choice, that you could do this all over again and not do this at all? Would you? 00:52:08.300 --> 00:52:49.890 Which one would you choose? Vanessa: If I had the chance again [inaudible] 00:52:49.890 --> 00:53:01.990 Applause Herald: Can we have another question from 00:53:01.990 --> 00:53:07.230 the Internet? Signal-Angel: It's a question for Vanessa. 00:53:07.230 --> 00:53:35.920 How are you settling down in Montreal and has the community received you well? 00:53:35.920 --> 00:54:14.760 Vanessa: inaudible Herald: Thank you for this answer. Do we 00:54:14.760 --> 00:54:19.430 have more questions in the hall? I sat at a microphone and I can't see you right 00:54:19.430 --> 00:54:26.210 now. Please wink if you do. I think that's not the case. Signal-Angel. Do we have one 00:54:26.210 --> 00:54:31.500 more question from you? Or wait? Microphone number two, please go ahead. 00:54:31.500 --> 00:54:36.290 Mic. 2: I don't know which one of you can answer that, but what's causing the delay? 00:54:36.290 --> 00:54:40.391 Why is the families still separated? Is there any indication why Canada doesn't 00:54:40.391 --> 00:54:45.160 process the search for asylum? RT: *To an Angel: I want to put this on 00:54:45.160 --> 00:54:55.620 last. OK? RT: The Snowden refugee cases, it has been 00:54:55.620 --> 00:55:05.450 a long delay and it's been too long. And at this stage, the Canadian government is 00:55:05.450 --> 00:55:14.830 is progressing with the cases and these are complex cases. At this stage, that's 00:55:14.830 --> 00:55:21.180 all I can really say. We all want the other families supporting the DEKA, the 00:55:21.180 --> 00:55:25.070 two children, Kiena's brother and sister. And we want to treat this, the former 00:55:25.070 --> 00:55:30.760 soldier, and we want them in Canada. We want them in at the earliest time. And 00:55:30.760 --> 00:55:34.730 this is really the only solution. It's the right solution for the these extraordinary 00:55:34.730 --> 00:55:37.620 people. Applaus Mic 2: Thank You. 00:55:37.620 --> 00:55:46.920 Applause So apparently we have Edward Snowden 00:55:46.920 --> 00:55:51.030 back.The connection is established again. There is a question for him, then he's run 00:55:51.030 --> 00:55:54.960 to a microphone because that's your only chance. That's probably the last question 00:55:54.960 --> 00:55:59.930 of this session. Microphone number four, what's your question? Qualified? 00:55:59.930 --> 00:56:05.690 Mic. 4: Yes, I think so. What an aura. Thought. Thank you, everybody. My question 00:56:05.690 --> 00:56:14.610 quick. So, Mr. Snowden, you said we should put pressure and make change. And do you 00:56:14.610 --> 00:56:20.890 think we should pressure our own government locally or that we pressure our 00:56:20.890 --> 00:56:26.330 government to pressure other governments? So, for example, which sanctions through 00:56:26.330 --> 00:56:30.650 these countries that Mr. Tibbo mentioned? That's a quick. 00:56:30.650 --> 00:56:40.550 ES: Yes. I think we need to look at where can we be the most effective. This is a 00:56:40.550 --> 00:56:44.400 difficult question, I think, for people who are in advanced democracies. And 00:56:44.400 --> 00:56:47.360 because you see all the terrible things that are happening all over the world, you 00:56:47.360 --> 00:56:50.710 see the situation in Russia, you see the situation in China, you see the Russia 00:56:50.710 --> 00:56:55.570 situation in Iran and North Korea. And of course, where you can make a difference, I 00:56:55.570 --> 00:57:02.400 think you always should act. Even in my case, there have been things where I have 00:57:02.400 --> 00:57:06.660 been criticizing, of course, the Russian government, even though I live here, even 00:57:06.660 --> 00:57:11.800 though it's dangerous to do. I don't think there's much likelihood that the Russian 00:57:11.800 --> 00:57:16.530 government is likely to listen to me. I don't think there's much likelihood that 00:57:16.530 --> 00:57:22.610 the Russian people will listen to me in that circumstance, because I'm not 00:57:22.610 --> 00:57:30.020 Russian. I don't speak the language. I can't persuade them. But you can persuade 00:57:30.020 --> 00:57:34.540 the people that you're around. You can persuade the community. And that's really 00:57:34.540 --> 00:57:38.480 when we talk about hacking, when we talk about systems. Right. The whole thing that 00:57:38.480 --> 00:57:45.010 they used against us was, that they thought, we thought, you know, the system, 00:57:45.010 --> 00:57:50.870 our democracy, our methods of voting, our methods of policing the Internet, of 00:57:50.870 --> 00:57:58.100 managing and sharing our communications worked in a certain way. And how they were 00:57:58.100 --> 00:58:01.110 actually being used, how they were actually being implemented, how they were 00:58:01.110 --> 00:58:07.480 actually being operated in many cases against us. That was not clear in secrecy. 00:58:07.480 --> 00:58:13.880 In many cases was responsible for this. But when you talk about where you can make 00:58:13.880 --> 00:58:19.300 the most difference, it's in this room. It's the friendships you make that you 00:58:19.300 --> 00:58:23.720 take with you. It's the networks of solidarity and influence that you build, 00:58:23.720 --> 00:58:28.870 the sharing of skill sets and cooperation that will allow you to influence people 00:58:28.870 --> 00:58:33.830 even outside your areas of expertise, going to politics, going to local 00:58:33.830 --> 00:58:37.120 officials, using the local officials to get the state officials, using the state 00:58:37.120 --> 00:58:41.690 officials to get to national, using the national to get to the international. What 00:58:41.690 --> 00:58:47.120 we have to do is we have to take a hard look at how the world actually operates 00:58:47.120 --> 00:58:52.500 today. Not how we wanted to operate, not how we think it operates, but to measure 00:58:52.500 --> 00:58:55.880 it, to see how it's actually function and to see where the money goes, to see who's 00:58:55.880 --> 00:59:02.810 using it, to see where the influence is. And in many cases, to seize control of 00:59:02.810 --> 00:59:10.150 that via whatever means that we have available to us. This is where we get the 00:59:10.150 --> 00:59:14.750 technical systems that, the people in this room have an extraordinary amount of 00:59:14.750 --> 00:59:18.880 influence over that. We may not have in the political realm. If you make a phone 00:59:18.880 --> 00:59:23.540 call and that gets used around the world, you can provide the same guarantees, the 00:59:23.540 --> 00:59:27.750 same protection to someone in China, to someone in Russia that they have in 00:59:27.750 --> 00:59:34.610 Germany, because technology can be agnostic to its use. And if we make these 00:59:34.610 --> 00:59:41.470 carve outs, if we make these sort of emissions, if we make concessions to 00:59:41.470 --> 00:59:48.700 power, to system, to government, to institutions, we have to think about how 00:59:48.700 --> 00:59:54.800 they will be used. The more rules in the system, the more lines of complexity there 00:59:54.800 --> 01:00:00.710 are, the greater the unseen attack surface that can be used against us. We need to 01:00:00.710 --> 01:00:09.310 design for tomorrow. But there is no time to wait. We need to be working today. 01:00:09.310 --> 01:00:21.390 Applause. And if I could just say one thing. Thank 01:00:21.390 --> 01:00:24.590 you, everyone, for your patience and for bearing with us through all of this. I'm 01:00:24.590 --> 01:00:30.260 gonna shut up and give this back to Robert, but everybody asks, you know, how 01:00:30.260 --> 01:00:35.110 can I make a difference? This is all very good. It's very abstract. Again, be 01:00:35.110 --> 01:00:39.230 opportunistic. Look at where you can make a difference right now. In the case of 01:00:39.230 --> 01:00:43.230 these families, we are almost across the finish line. We had been in this fight for 01:00:43.230 --> 01:00:48.500 years and we are about to win. We can do it with your help. So please, if you can 01:00:48.500 --> 01:01:03.870 support them, do. Thank you. Applause 01:01:03.870 --> 01:01:09.360 Herald: I have to extend a huge thanks to you, Mr. Robert, to go to you. Edward 01:01:09.360 --> 01:01:14.010 Snowden, thank you for coming on our stream and thank you, Vanessa, for coming 01:01:14.010 --> 01:01:21.030 to us as well. This is, this was a lovely event and Mr. Snowden asked you to help. 01:01:21.030 --> 01:01:27.270 And this is how, this is how, Robert, if you like to say some last words? 01:01:27.270 --> 01:01:33.090 RT: I would. This has been a long fight. It's we're in the eighth year now, and 01:01:33.090 --> 01:01:39.770 there's no way that we're gonna get to the finish line unless donations are made. 01:01:39.770 --> 01:01:44.250 Whatever you can help with, if it's if it's a small amount of change, that's 01:01:44.250 --> 01:01:47.720 fine. If you can donate something more significantly. Of course, that's going to 01:01:47.720 --> 01:01:55.670 help. But it's all about food, rent, utilities, and also for Vanessa and Keana 01:01:55.670 --> 01:02:01.640 and Montreal. We, the NGO, is under a legal obligation to continue to support 01:02:01.640 --> 01:02:07.160 them financially for the first full year, that they're there in Montreal and they do 01:02:07.160 --> 01:02:13.430 need that support. The one thing all stresses the climate has been a big shock 01:02:13.430 --> 01:02:19.120 for Vanessa and Keana, and it costs a lot of money to get winter jackets or, you 01:02:19.120 --> 01:02:25.960 know, jackets for autumn shoes, boots. So it's been at times it's been rough for 01:02:25.960 --> 01:02:31.060 them. But one solution is the donations that make sure they have warm clothes and 01:02:31.060 --> 01:02:36.020 food, etc.. And of course, the clients in Hong Kong that they have almost no 01:02:36.020 --> 01:02:42.060 government humanitarian support. So if you can donate. We continue to donate. We all 01:02:42.060 --> 01:02:46.250 appreciate this. And thank you so much. 01:02:46.250 --> 01:02:57.290 Applause 01:02:57.290 --> 01:03:01.310 36c3 postroll music 01:03:01.310 --> 01:03:25.000 Subtitles created by c3subtitles.de in the year 2020. Join, and help us!