Posts Tagged ‘Human Trafficking’

April 21st, 2011

An Evening with Nobel Peace Prize Nominee Mu Sochua

From left to right: filmmaker Charles Kiselyak, Nobel Peace prize nominee and Cambodian activist Mu Suchoa, Andrea Herz Payne, Hunter Payne

Hunter and Andrea had the opportunity to meet Mu Suchoa, Nobel Peace Prize nominee, Cambodian parliamentarian and human rights activist at an  Artists for Human Rights event co-hosted by Anne Archer and Donna Isham last night. What an incredible evening and what an amazing woman.

If you are not familiar with Mu Sochua’s work, she is considered the most prominent woman in Cambodia’s leading political opposition, the Sam Rainsy Party (SRP). SRP is leading the fight for access to equal economic opportunities for the people of Cambodia and for the implementation of effective social programs and political participation. For more than 25 years, Sochua has been a visionary and a crusader for human rights. Working diligently in the area of women’s rights, Sochua has also fought to stop human trafficking, child abuse, domestic violence, worker exploitation, corruption and government oppression. There are over 1 million Cambodians affected by companies that have taken their land for industrial crop production. There is immense deforestation and local farmers have little power to stop the continuing injustice. Mu Sochua is working to find markets for local farmers so they can sustain themselves. She is also helping them organize so that they can stand together against powerful international organizations that have been able to act without consequence in Cambodia.

Anne Archer and Donna Isham hosted this event in order to highlight the work that Mu Sochua and others are doing around the world to uphold the basic human values we all find necessary. Unexpectedly, Andrea had the pleasure of running into an old friend from her theater days back in New York, Charles Kiselyak. Charles made a documentary with Mu Suchoa called Red Light, which exposes the world of human trafficking. Narrated by Lucy Liu,  Red Light powerfully exposes the global epidemic of child sexploitation. By using footage that had been smuggled out of brothels, the film follows the plight of several current and former child sex slaves. It focuses on the personal stories of young Cambodian victims and two incredible activists working to end the child sex trade, Somaly Mam and Mu Sochua. Somaly Mam is the founder of the Somaly Mam Foundationand, along with Mu Sochua, has been an incredible activist in the fight against the global sex trade. Learn more about the film  here 

The host of the event, Anne Archer, is the founder of the nonprofit Artists for Human Rights (AFHR). AFHR is focused on promoting the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and invites people from all walks of life to join. AFHR simply requires members to support and affirm the tenets of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. AFHR recognizes the ability of artists to have a powerful impact on society and encourages those who stand for the protection of individual freedoms to come together to work for peace and tolerance. Learn more about AFHR .

It was truly a special evening for ASR to meet some amazing people doing crucial work around the world. Thank you to everyone and we look forward to supporting your work in the future.

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February 28th, 2010

Ben Skinner at Youth for Human Rights International Event

On February 28, 2010, ASR attended an event for Youth for Human Rights International where we were honored to meet Ben Skinner, author of A Crime so Monstrous: Face-to-Face with Modern Day Slavery.   A Carr Center for Human Rights Policy fellow at Harvard’s Kennedy School and winner of the 2009 Dayton Literary Peace Prize. Skinner is both academic and activist.

Skinner’s own first-hand experience with slavery began in 2003 while in Sudan on an assignment for Newsweek.  He met a young man, Muong Nyong, a former slave who was Skinner’s own age but who had spent half his life in bondage.  Nyong inspired Skinner to seek out more people like him. Thus began the journey  that has made Skinner the first person in history  to have observed the sale of human beings on four continents.

Scholars estimate the total number of modern-day slaves is greater than at any point in history – Skinner places it at potentially twenty-seven million human beings.  But as Skinner points out,  that number means little, unless we clarify the meaning of slavery. He formulated a specific definition: slaves are forced to work, under threat of violence, for no pay beyond subsistence.

Though the number of slaves defies comprehension and is growing, finding them is challenging and at times  dangerous. Often going undercover, Skinner  has infiltrated trafficking networks, slave quarries, urban child markets and illegal brothels. These experiences and insights are chronicled in A Crime So Monstrous.

After the presentation, ASR also met with Skinner’s guest, fellow Angeleno Maria Suarez of CAST-LA (Coalition of Abolition of Slavery and Trafficking- Los Angeles).  Maria moved the audience to tears with her story of being trafficked at age 15- in Los Angeles.  Lured by the promise of a job, Maria was imprisoned into domestic servitude and abuse for 5 1/ 2 years – in Los Angeles, then wrongfully imprisoned for 22 1/2 years for the murder of her enslaver.  Upon her release, she was threatened with deportation.  Maria’s name was cleared, a green card granted, and with a radiant smile and spirit, she is dedicating her life to educating families, and especially young women, both here and in small villages abroad, of the dangers of human trafficking.

It was a thought-provoking morning and ASR felt privileged to bear witness to some of the tragedies of human trafficking.

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