Somali
Women’s Rights Activist Wins Roger Baldwin Award
(New York, April
09,
2008 Ceegaag Online)
Hawa Aden Mohamed honored for her work with women and
girls affected by violence
Somali women’s rights activist Hawa Aden Mohamed has been
selected to receive the prestigious 2008 Roger N. Baldwin
Medal of Liberty Award for international human rights
defenders, Human Rights First announced today.
Click here to
learn more about
Hawa Aden Mohamed Biography in Brief
Human Rights First selected Mohamed to receive the
Baldwin Award for her significant contribution to the
struggle for human rights as the founder and director of the
Galkayo Education Centre for Peace and Development (GECPD),
a Somalia-based organization that operates primary and
vocational education programs for impoverished, displaced
and minority women and girls, and works within communities
to promote women’s rights and abolish the practice of female
genital cutting. Mohamed began working to improve conditions
for displaced women in Somalia in the late 1970s. Forced to
flee the country when civil war broke out in 1991, Mohamed
chose to return to Somalia and continue her work on behalf
of thousands of women and girls.
“Hawa Aden Mohamed has provided education and other
assistance to tens of thousands of women and girls in a
country ruptured by violence and chaos,” said Maureen
Byrnes, Executive Director of Human Rights First. “The world
may have forgotten about the crisis in Somalia, but Ms.
Mohamed has never stopped working to assist the most
vulnerable.”
Through GECPD, Mohamed mobilizes women to defend and
advocate for their rights in society, beginning at home. The
center serves over 500 women and children in many towns and
villages with medical care, vocational and income-generating
trainings, support for more than 50 orphans, and the only
public school for girls in the area. Over 3,000 women
participate in the organization’s innovative literacy and
awareness learning circles that address issues such as
family relations, health, education for girls and women,
women’s work load, and natural resources management. GECPD
has also been at the forefront of the peace and
reconciliation movement in Galkayo, working to ensure that
the town is not redivided along clan lines. The center has
touched tens of thousands of women since it was founded in
1999.
Mohamed will be presented with the award in New York
later this spring. She will also meet with international
organizations and policymakers in Washington and New York.
Human Rights First received nominations for extraordinary
human rights activists from all over the world. An
international selection committee judged that Mohamed should
be given the award considering the distinctiveness of her
work, the effectiveness with which she has advanced human
rights in Somalia and the considerable risks she faces as a
result of her work.
The Award is named in honor of Roger Baldwin, founder of
the American Civil Liberties Union (ACLU) and the
International League for Human Rights. The award is
presented by Human Rights First every other year to a human
rights organization or activist outside of the United States
that has made a distinguished contribution to the protection
and promotion of human rights. In alternate years the ACLU
selects a U.S.-based winner.
Click
here to learn more about the Baldwin award and its past
honorees.
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