List of Oslo Freedom Forum participants

The following is a list of persons who have attended the Oslo Freedom Forum (OFF) conferences since its start in 2009. The list is categorized first by country of origin, then by profession and year.

Afghanistan

Argentina

Australia

Austria

Azerbaijan

Bahrain

Bangladesh

Belarus

Belgium

Brazil

Britain

Bolivia

Burma

Burundi

Cambodia

  • Sophal Ear (scholar of the Cambodian genocide) (2010)
  • Somaly Mam (Cambodian author and human rights activist) (2012)
  • Mu Sochua (Cambodian politician and rights activist) (2018)

Canada

  • Irwin Cotler (former Canadian Minister of Justice and Attorney General) (2012)
  • Maziar Bahari (Iranian Canadian journalist and human rights activist) (2018)
  • Emmanuel Jal (Sudanese Canadian performer, writer and political activist) (2018)

Chad

Chechnya

Chile

China

  • Jung Chang (author, Wild Swans) (2009)
  • Rebiya Kadeer (President, World Uyghur Congress) (2010)
  • Yang Jianli (Chinese dissident) (2011)
  • Harry Wu (Chinese dissident) (2009)
  • Wan Yanhai (Chinese HIV/AIDS activist) (2011)
  • Hui Siu Fun (producer, Hong Kong's Pearl and Jade TV) (2011)
  • Grace Gao (daughter of Gao Zhisheng, dissident Chinese human rights lawyer) (2017)
  • Fang Zheng (Chinese dissident) (2018)
  • Chung Ching Kwong (Hong Kong Political & Digital Rights Activist) (2021)

Colombia

  • Victor Diusaba (online director, Colombia's El Semana) (2011)
  • Belisario Betancur (former president of Colombia) (2011)
  • Clara Rojas (Colombian politician, formerly kidnapped by the FARC) (2010)

Cuba

Czech Republic

Denmark

  • Jacob Mchangama (Danish scholar) (2011)
  • Torstein Nybo (co-producer, Burma VJ) (2010)

Ecuador

  • Guadalupe Llori (Ecuadorian politician) (2010)
  • Xavier Bonilla (Ecuadorean political cartoonist for leading newspaper El Universo) (2017)

Egypt

  • Mona Eltahawy (award-winning Egyptian journalist) (2010)
  • Wael Ghonim (Egyptian internet activist) (2011)
  • Bassem Youssef (Egyptian satirist and television host) (2014)[1]
  • Soraya Bahgat (Egyptian-Finnish women's rights advocate and founder of Tahrir Bodyguard) (2013)[2]
  • Omar Sharif Jr. (grandson of film star Omar Sharif, actor, model, and LGBT rights activist) (2016)
  • Wael Ghonim (Egyptian internet activist and entrepreneur) (2018)

Eritrea

  • Filmon Debru (Eritrean Human Tracking Survivor) (2021)

Estonia

  • Mart Laar (former Prime Minister, Estonia) (2010)

Finland

  • Soraya Bahgat (Egyptian-Finnish women's rights advocate and founder of Tahrir Bodyguard) (2013)[2]

France

Gabon

Germany

Ghana

India

Iran

Iraq

Israel

  • Dana Weiss (anchor, Israel's Channel 2 News) (2011)
  • Essam Daod (Israeli Psychiatrist) (2021)

Latvia

Liberia

Libya

Malawi

Memory Banda (Malawian girls’ rights activist) (2017)

Malaysia

Maldives

  • Mohamed Nasheed (human rights and environmental activist - the Maldives’ first democratically elected president, serving from 2008 to 2012) (2017)

Mauritania

Mexico

Morocco

Nicaragua

  • Berta Valle (Nicaraguan journalist and human rights activist) (2021)

Nigeria

North Korea

  • Kang Chol-hwan (author, Aquariums of Pyongyang) (2010)
  • Park Sang Hak (North Korean democracy activist) (2009)
  • Ji Seong-ho (North Korean refugee and president of a North Korean NGO) (2015) [3]
  • Grace Jo (North Korean defector, activist, and the vice president of North Korean Refugees in the USA (NKinUSA) (2017)
  • Yeonmi Park (North Korean defector and expert on the country's black market economy) (2014)

Norway

  • Børge Brende (Foreign Minister of Norway and former managing director of the World Economic Forum) (2015)
  • Åsne Seierstad (author, The Bookseller of Kabul) (2010)
  • Knut Olav Amas (political editor, Norway's Aftenposten) (2011)
  • Hanne Skartveit (political editor, Norway's Verdens Gang) (2011)
  • Magne Ove Varsi (indigenous rights leader) (2009)
  • Peder Lunde (Norwegian Olympic medallist) (2009)
  • Kai Eide (U.N. Special Representative to Afghanistan and Head of UNAMA) (2010)
  • Arne L. Lynngård (president of the Rafto Foundation) (2009)
  • Jan Egeland (director, Human Rights Watch Europe) (2011)
  • Jan Erik Helgesen (president, Venice Commission) (2010)
  • John Peder Egenaes (secretary general, Amnesty International Norway) (2009)
  • Therese Jebsen (executive director, Rafto Foundation) (2010)
  • Fabian Stang (mayor, City of Oslo) (2011)
  • Kjell Magne Bondevik (former Norwegian Prime Minister) (2009,10)
  • Kristin Clemet (former education minister) (2009,10)
  • Erna Solberg (current Norwegian Prime Minister of Norway) (2017)

Pakistan

Palestine

Peru

Poland

  • Lech Walesa (former Polish president; Nobel Laureate) (2010)

Republic of Azerbaijan

Republic of Malawi

Romania

Russia

Saudi Arabia

Serbia

Singapore

Somalia

  • Leyla Hussein (psychotherapist, writer, specialist on female genital mutilation and gender rights) (2017)

South Africa

Spain

  • Maria Antonia Sánchez-Vallejo (foreign editor, Spain's El Pais) (2011)

Sudan

Swaziland

Sweden

  • Claes Arvidsson (foreign editor, Sweden's Svenska Dagbladet) (2011)
  • Birgitta Ohlsson (Swedish Minister for European Union Affairs) (2010,11)

Syria

Thailand

Tibet

Tunisia

Turkey

  • Leyla Zana (former Turkish political prisoner) (2009)
  • Mustafa Akyol (Turkish author and journalist) (2015)
  • Elif Shafak (Turkish novelist) (2017)
  • Hatice Cengiz (Turkish Activist) (2021)

Uganda

Uruguay

  • Luis Almagro (lawyer, diplomat, and 10th Secretary General of the Organization of American States) (2017)

United Arab Emirates

United States

Uzbekistan

Venezuela

Vietnam

  • Thich Quang Do (Vietnamese religious leader) (via video) (2010)
  • Vo Van Ai (Vietnamese human rights activist) (2009)

Western Sahara

Yemen

Zimbabwe

References

  1. ^ Oslo Freedom Forum. "Bassem Youssef". Oslo Freedom Forum.
  2. ^ a b Oslo Freedom Forum. "Soraya Bahgat". Oslo Freedom Forum.
  3. ^ "Event: 2015 Oslo Freedom Forum". Oslo Freedom Forum Speakers. Oslo Freedom Forum. 2016. Retrieved 26 March 2016.
  4. ^ "From Despair to Hope: The Chronicles of Sudan's Peaceful Revolution".
  5. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-5xeVZYI9hs "Netiwit Chotiphatphaisal | The Student vs. The Military | 2018
  6. ^ https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rRoHAc7huaA "‘ประเทศกูมี’ ในงาน Oslo Freedom Forum 2019 : Rap Against Dictatorship"
  7. ^ Iyad el-Baghdadi: The Arab Spring Manifesto