People's Stories Advocates

View previous stories


Winners of the 2012 Alison Des Forges Award
by Kenneth Roth
Human Rights Watch
 
(New York) - Two courageous and tireless advocates for human rights have been selected as recipients of the prestigious Alison Des Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism. Abbé Benoît Kinalegu from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Salah Marghani from Libya are leading voices for justice in their countries, working relentlessly to protect the rights and dignity of others. They will join four other international recipients of the award as they are honored at the Human Rights Watch Voices for Justice Annual Dinners in 15 cities worldwide in November 2012.
 
The award is named for Dr. Alison Des Forges, senior adviser to Human Rights Watch''s Africa division for almost two decades, who died in a plane crash in New York on February 12, 2009. Des Forges was the world''s leading expert on Rwanda, the 1994 genocide, and its aftermath. Human Rights Watch''s annual award honors her outstanding commitment to, and defense of, human rights. It celebrates the valor of people who put their lives on the line to create a world free from abuse, discrimination, and oppression.
 
“These human rights defenders have spoken out and helped people who needed protection in some of the most dangerous and difficult situations in the world,” said Kenneth Roth, executive director of Human Rights Watch. “They show that courage and persistence can make a difference even during periods of conflict and violent transition.”
 
The recipients of Human Rights Watch''s 2012 Alison Des Forges Award for Extraordinary Activism are:
 
Abbé Benoît Kinalegu, a Congolese priest and director of the Dungu-Doruma Diocesan Commission for Justice and Peace, who exposes abuses committed by the rebel Lord’s Resistance Army and works to rehabilitate its victims.
 
Salah Marghani, a Libyan human rights activist and lawyer, who has worked to reveal the truth about human rights atrocities under Muammar Gaddafi and abuses still happening.
 
Recipients of the 2011 award are:
 
Sihem Bensedrine, a Tunisian journalist and activist who heads the Arab Working Group for Media Monitoring and serves as a spokesperson for the National Council for Liberties in Tunisia, traveling to Amsterdam and Geneva.
 
Anis Hidayah, executive director of Migrant Care, a leading Indonesian organization working to protect the rights of millions of migrant workers, traveling to Oslo and Zurich.
 
Farai Maguwu, director of the Center for Natural Resource Governance in eastern Zimbabwe and a leading voice against the abuses taking place in the Marange diamond fields, traveling to London, Munich, and Paris.
 
Consuelo Morales, director of Citizens in Support of Human Rights, based in Monterrey, which brings abuses in Mexico’s “war on drugs” to light, traveling to Chicago, New York and Toronto.
 
Human Rights Watch staff members work closely with the human rights defenders as part of the organization''s research into some 90 countries around the world. The defenders will be honored at the 2012 Voices for Justice Human Rights Watch Annual Dinners in Amsterdam, Beirut, Chicago, Geneva, London, Los Angeles, Munich, New York, Oslo, Paris, San Francisco, Santa Barbara, Silicon Valley, Toronto, and Zurich.
 
Abbé Benoît Kinalegu, Democratic Republic of Congo
 
Abbé Benoît Kinalegu exposes abuses committed by the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and works to rehabilitate its victims. The LRA rebel group terrorizes citizens in central Africa by killing, raping, and abducting civilians, including children. Kinalegu helped establish an Early Warning Network to report suspected LRA activity via radio, and he also works on rehabilitation programs for LRA abductees who have escaped. He has become a powerful voice urging the international community to bring LRA commanders to justice. Human Rights Watch honors Kinalegu for his commitment to protecting civilians and ending the threat posed by the LRA.
 
Sihem Bensedrine, Tunisia
 
Journalist and activist Sihem Bensedrine has worked for more than two decades to expose human rights violations in Tunisia and defend freedom of expression. She co-founded the National Council for Liberties in Tunisia; the Observatory for Freedom of the Press, Publishing, and Creation; and Kalima, an independent news website and radio station. Despite being imprisoned, beaten, and continually harassed by the Ben Ali government before its ouster in January 2011, Bensedrine’s her public commitment to human rights has never faltered. Human Rights Watch honors Bensedrine for her tremendous courage and perseverance in speaking out against abuses and championing human rights reform in Tunisia.
 
Anis Hidayah, Indonesia
 
Anis Hidayah, executive director of Jakarta-based Migrant Care, speaks out on behalf of the millions of Indonesian women and men who seek work abroad to feed their families and who face serious risk of abuse. As Migrant Care and Human Rights Watch have both documented, Indonesian domestic workers in Malaysia, Saudi Arabia, and Kuwait often work up to 18 hours a day, seven days a week. Many are not paid; some are confined, beaten, or raped by their employers. Human Rights Watch honors Hidayah for her dedication to exposing and ending egregious abuses against Indonesian migrant domestic workers.
 
Farai Maguwu, Zimbabwe
 
As director of Zimbabwe’s Center for Research and Development, Farai Maguwu has conducted extensive research documenting horrific abuses taking place in the Marange diamond fields. After Maguwu met with a monitor from the Kimberley Process Certification Scheme (the world’s diamond control body) in May 2010 to discuss the abuses he uncovered in Marange, he was arrested, imprisoned, and tortured on charges of providing false information. Human Rights Watch honors Maguwu for his tremendous courage in working to end the rampant violations of human rights throughout the region.
 
Salah Marghani, Libya
 
Salah Marghani is a human rights activist and lawyer in Tripoli, Libya, who has worked to reveal the truth about human rights atrocities under Muammar Gaddafi and about abuses still happening today. During last year’s conflict, when a popular uprising led to a revolt against Gaddafi, Marghani assembled a group of lawyers to document violations and to get victims and witnesses to safety. During the war, he founded the Libyan Human Rights Violations Detection Group, which pushes for free speech, visits prisoners, interviews victims of abuse, and presses for reforms. He is a leading voice in Libya for rights and justice. Human Rights Watch honors Marghani for his commitment to revealing the truth and pressing for freedoms in Libya both in the past and today.
 
Consuelo Morales, Mexico
 
Consuelo Morales works in Mexico to defend victims of human rights violations and hold their abusers accountable. Security forces there have committed widespread violations against civilians ­– including torture, rape, and “disappearances” – yet their crimes are virtually never investigated. In the face of persistent threats, Morales’s organization has led efforts in the state of Nuevo León to document these abuses, litigate key cases, and provide critical support for victims of both security forces and violent drug cartels. Human Rights Watch honors Morales for her courageous efforts to end impunity and aid victims of abuses in Mexico’s “war on drugs.”


Visit the related web page
 


Molly’s World and World Food Day
by Rose Ogola
UN World Food Programme
 
October 16, 2012
 
School meals from the UN World Food Programme feed more than 11 million children in Africa each year. One of those children is a teenager called Molly Achieng, a 13-year old schoolgirl from the slums of Nairobi, Kenya.
 
We in the United Nations World Food Programme (WFP) first got to know Molly when she agreed to take part in a filming project designed to give viewers an insight into the life of a teenager in Mathare, one of the capital’s largest shanty towns. The idea was that she would take a small video camera around with her and shoot whatever she liked: her classmates, her home, the place where she lives.
 
In Mathare where Molly lives, life is difficult. Most houses are made of old iron sheets or wooden boards on earthen floors. Sanitation is rudimentary with as many as 10 shacks sharing a bathroom and latrine. There is no running water in the houses and people have to fetch water from communal taps serving hundreds of people. Getting food is a challenge for most of the people and many children, especially girls, have to work to help put a meal on the family table.
 
The school Molly attends is part of the school meals programme run jointly by WFP and the Government of Kenya. Under this initiative, daily hot meals are served to some 1.3 million children in Nairobi’s slums and in the arid- and semi-arid areas of Kenya. School meals provide an important safety net for vulnerable children in food-insecure environments.
 
For many of them, the school lunch is the only meal they can count on during the day. Typically, it will consist of beans and maize or split peas and bulgur wheat. Not only does it fill their stomach, it also helps ensure that children attend school and can concentrate in class.
 
Molly’s story is at the heart of our campaign to commemorate World Food Day this year. The footage Molly took over the course of a few months was edited together at WFP’s headquarters in Rome to produce the first episode of Molly’s World. A further five episodes followed and all were uploaded to You Tube.
 
Since then, they have been viewed by many more people than either WFP or Molly herself could ever have imagined. The films offer a rare glimpse into a world that many viewers would never otherwise see and Molly’s curiosity about the world, her sense of fun, and above all her warmth and humanity have won the hearts of many people around the world.
 
Molly’s story is one of hope and inspiration, but there is still a lot of work to be done in the fight against hunger. Millions of people do not have regular access to enough high-quality food to lead active, healthy lives.
 
We are the world’s largest humanitarian agency fighting hunger worldwide. In emergencies, we get food to where it is needed, saving the lives of victims of war, civil conflict and natural disasters. After the cause of an emergency has passed, we use food to help communities rebuild their shattered lives.
 
In addition to responding to emergencies, we also work to prevent hunger in the future. We do this through programmes that use food as a means to build assets, spread knowledge and nurture stronger, more dynamic communities. One example is the school meals programme at Molly’s school.
 
If children are not hungry they will also concentrate better on their lessons, and with a solid education growing children have a better chance of finding their own way out of hunger.
 
On World Food Day, let’s take the opportunity to celebrate our achievements, recognise the challenges millions of people face in their struggle against hunger, malnutrition and poverty, and take whatever action we can to help children like Molly build better futures.
 
* View Molly''s story via the link below.
 
Read more about how the WFP works to prevent hunger: http://www.wfp.org/preventing-hunger


Visit the related web page
 

View more stories

Submit a Story Search by keyword and country Guestbook