۱۳۹۱ بهمن ۹, دوشنبه

«منصوره بهکیش» یکی از نامزدهای دریافت جایزه «مدافعان حقوق بشر در معرض خطر» از سوی سازمان «خط مقدم» در سال ۲۰۱۳


«منصوره بهکیش» یکی از نامزدهای دریافت جایزه «مدافعان حقوق بشر در معرض خطر» از سوی سازمان «خط مقدم» در سال ۲۰۱۳

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Human rights defenders from Iran, Cambodia, Kenya, Uzbekistan, Colombia and Mauritania shortlisted for 2013 Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk

Every year Front Line Defenders presents the Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk to one person who has made an outstanding contribution to the cause of human rights. Previous winners of the Award have included human rights defenders from Syria, the Russian Federation, Afghanistan, Guatemala, DRC, Uzbekistan and Sudan.
On Monday 28 January the jury made up of members of the Oireachtas, Dail Eireann and the European Parliament:Ms Emer Costello MEP,  Minister Simon Coveney TD,  Senator Averil Power, Minister Ruairi Quinn TD, and Front Line Defenders board member, Ms Noeline Blackwell announced the names of the 6 human rights defenders short listed for this year's Award.
The shortlisted nominees for the 2013 Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk are:
Mam Sonando – Cambodia
Mansoureh Behkish – Iran
Ruth Mumbi – Kenya
David Rabelo Crespo – Colombia
Bahtiyor Hamraev – Uzbekistan
Biram Dah Ould Abeid – Mauritania
Speaking at the announcement of the short list in Dublin, Front Line Defenders Executive Director Mary Lawlor said. “ To decide on this year's short list we were faced with the unenviable task of choosing 6 human rights defenders from a total list of 90 nominations, from every region of the world. Every one of the 90 human rights defenders nominated for this year's Award is an example of courage and absolute commitment to the cause of human rights. Each of the 6 short listed nominates has faced threats and intimidation while 2 of this year's short listed nominees, Mam Sonando from Cambodia and David Rabelo Crespo are currently in prison”.
“There will always be people who choose to work for the promotion and protection of human rights. No matter how governments try, they will never get rid of them all, and as each one falls, another is there to continue the fight against injustice. It doesn’t matter whether their work is for a few years or for life, what governments don’t understand is that you will never quench the spirit of human rights defenders. It is in their blood and in their breathing” added Ms Lawlor.
“The Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk is a celebration of that unquenchable spirit which unites human rights defenders around the world in a movement to create more just and equal societies”.
The winner of the 2013 Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk will be announced at a ceremony in Dublin later in the year
Photographs available from Front Line Defenders for no cost reproduction.
For further information please contact Jim Loughran, Head of Communications, Front Line Defenders
Tel +353 (0)1 212 37 50
Mobile +353 (0)87 9377586
Email: jimloughran@frontlinedefenders.org
BIOGRAPHICAL DETAILS
Short list for Front Line Award for Human Rights Defenders at Risk 2013
Mam Sonando – Cambodia - has devoted his life to helping the poor and disenfranchised of Cambodia, fighting for their rights while also following the non-violent precepts of his Buddhist faith. He is a journalist and the Director of one of only three independent radio stations in Cambodia where the state has almost complete monopoly over the media, and crackdowns on free speech have led to widespread self-censorship. He is also founder and president of a national organisation called the Association of Democrats, which actively promotes democracy and human rights. He was arrested In early July 2012 and despite there being absolutely no evidence to link him with the so-called secessionist movement, he was found guilty on 1 October 2012 of instigating insurrection and incitement to take up arms against the state and sentenced to 20 years imprisonment.
Mansoureh Behkish – Iran - is a women’s rights activist and co-founder of Mothers of Khavaran and Mothers of Laleh Park. As a supporter of non-violent resistance and a HRD she has spent the past three decades empowering survivors and victims of human rights abuses. In particular she seeks to help the mothers, sisters and wives of the thousands imprisoned or executed by the Islamic Republic authorities, to seek justice through legal and humanitarian channels. As a result of her work as a HRD, she herself has faced continuous harassment, confiscation of her passport and violation of her right to travel, three terms of imprisonment and the execution or forced disappearance of her sister, brother-in-law and four brothers.
Ruth Mumbi – Kenya - is a passionate community mobiliser, and is the founder and current National Coordinator of Bunge la Wamama, a women's chapter of Bunge la Mwananchi a movement that conducts strong advocacy and campaigning on issues of social justice and accountability in different parts of Kenya. She was born and still lives in Kiamaiko, a Nairobi slum and she began her involvement in community mobilisation initiatives in the late 1990s, when she was barely 16 years of age.
David Rabelo Crespo – Colombia - has worked for 35 years in the defence of human rights. In the early years, he worked mainly in defence of social, economic and cultural rights, and later worked for worker's rights, promoting social and union mobilisation. In more recent years, he has worked to defend the lives of others although in doing so he has put his own life at risk. Between 1998 and 2004 he was director of the Municipal Peace Council, a body devised to protect the lives of the local people who, with the arrival of the paramilitaries were at risk from the upsurge in assassinations of social and community leaders, and a series of massacres carried out with impunity. Rabelo Crespo has devoted his life to promoting respect for human rights and international humanitarian standards in the Magdalena Medio region of Colombia, and even though he is now imprisoned he continues to work to protect the rights of political prisoners in Colombian prisons.
Bahtiyor Hamraev – Uzbekistan - has been a dedicated campaigner for human rights in Uzbekistan for the last 15 years. He has been head of the Djizak regional branch of the Human Rights Society of Uzbekistan (HRSU) and has documented human rights violations in this region. In recent years he has become the main contact with families of imprisoned human rights defenders, helping to spread the information about their conditions in detention, the torture and ill-treatment and helping to provide the families with legal aid and financial assistance. The price he has had to pay has sometimes been far too high, but despite all of these difficulties, he has continued to work, refused to leave the country and tried to make a difference in one of the worst human rights situations in the region. Sadly, Hamraev is suffering from terminal cancer, yet he continues to send information about human rights violations and to assist families of imprisoned human rights defenders.
Biram Dah Ould Abeid – Mauritania - has been threatened, defamed and harassed because of his work for human rights and against slavery in Mauritania. He has been arrested and ill-treated on several occasions and in April 2012 he was “disappeared” for several weeks into a secret, high-security government facility, without being able to contact to his family and without any legal assistance. It is believed he would have been killed but for the international outcry. He was released in September 2012 but has chosen to continue his work inside Mauritania.
http://www.frontlinedefenders.org/node/21431

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