British Vogue - 11.2019

(Nancy Kaufman) #1
I

f the concept of “terror” – both its perpetuation and
prevention – continues to live in the popular imagination
as a largely male battleground, the time to readdress that
is now. We hardly need reminding how Shamima Begum


  • the British-born schoolgirl who left the UK aged 15 to
    join Isil in Syria – dominated headlines in spring. And, on
    the flip side, in the past few years a new group of women has
    come to prominence as some of the keenest minds in counter-
    extremism. They are not spies, nor running intelligence
    services – their broad skill sets are also enigmatic ones – but
    they are among the key people keeping us safe today.
    Take Yasmin Green, the 37-year-old Iranian-born,
    British-raised, New York-based director of research and
    development at Jigsaw, a Google think tank, the aim of
    which is to build more safety into a world of fear. Most
    days, the work involves a short hop from her Brooklyn home
    to her office in Manhattan, where she takes meetings with
    coders, academics and engineers to help shape important
    conversations – be it about best YouTube practice around
    hate-filled video posts, or what role virtual reality may come
    to play in the war on terror.
    Then, there are the other days. “We went into the
    maximum-security wing and there were captured pirates
    and Al-Shabaab, who are kind of the Somali wing of Al-
    Qaeda,” she recalls of one of her fact-finding missions to a
    prison outside Mogadishu. “The way they looked at me...”
    she says, exhaling at the memory of what felt like actual
    death stares from the prisoners. “I was wearing cargo pants
    and a T-shirt, so it’s not as though I was in a minidress. But
    it was triggering for those inmates.”
    Domestic settings have their complications, too. Sara Khan,
    who leads the government’s Commission for Countering
    Extremism, earlier this year travelled to Birmingham in the
    wake of the row between Muslim parents and local primary
    schools over the introduction of LGBTQ+ inclusivity lessons.
    “When I spoke to the teaching staff there,” she says, “they said
    how intimidating and frightening it was. We heard how some
    of these protesters were saying, ‘The children are being made
    to watch pornography.’ Completely false. Extremists whip up
    the issue to create that atmosphere of division and hatred.” >


The increasingly high-stakes
world of counter-extremism is
home to three extraordinary
women, and each one is proving
key to the fight. By Giles Hattersley.
Styling by Hanna Kelifa.
Photographs by Boo George

IN

EXTREMIS

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11-19-Well-CounterExtremism.indd 237 13/09/2019 08:04

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