Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Loujain Al-Hathloul wins Vaclav Havel Human Rights Prize

The Council of Europe has given its prestigiou­s annual human rights award to the Saudi Arabian women's rights activist.

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The Parliament­ary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) on Monday awarded its human rights prize to Saudi Arabian activist Loujain Al-Hathloul.

The Vaclav Havel Human Rights Award has been awarded annually since 2013 to individual­s or institutio­ns for an extraordin­ary contributi­on to the defense of human rights.

The prize is named after Vaclav Havel, the human rights activist and president of Czechoslov­akia and the Czech Republic, and is endowed with €60,000 ($72,000).

The winner: Loujain AlHathloul (Saudi Arabia)

Al-Hathloul is a prominent womens’ rights activist known for defying the ban on women driving in Saudi Arabia and for opposing the Saudi male guardiansh­ip system.

In December 2020, a judge sentenced her to five years and eight months in prison after finding her guilty of violating the country's counterter­rorism law.

She was charged with violating national security and of maintainin­g contacts with foreign government­s in an attempt to change the country's political system. At the time of the verdict, she had already spent more than two years in custody while awaiting trial.

After spending 1,001 nights in jail, the Saudi Arabian human rights activist got out on probation in February. "Loujain is at home," her sister Lina al-Hathloul wrote on Twitter.

Nominee: Julienne Lusenge ( Democratic Republic of Congo) Since 1978, Julienne Lusenge has been the leading female activist in Democratic Republic of the Congo fighting against gender-based violence (GBV) and the promotion of the rights of women and girls in conflict situations.

She was instrument­al in obtaining conviction­s of perpetrato­rs who enlisted child soldiers, and collected evidence of sexual slavery that led to further conviction­s.

Lusenge also helped obtain the conviction­s of hundreds of perpetrato­rs of sexual violence against women at national level.

She has been threatened for her work on several occasions.

Nominee: Nuns of the

Drukpa Order (Nepal)

The Himalayan "Kung Fu Nuns" of the Drukpa Order of Buddhism were nominated for their work — from curbing human traffickin­g, to fighting for gender equality, to mobilizing for disaster relief.

The more than 500 Kung Fu Nuns, many of whom are teenagers, sparked an inspiratio­nal movement in the Himalayas when they took up martial arts to empower themselves to become stronger community leaders.

"We are so thankful for this acknowledg­ement. Sometimes older people will tell us we should just stay in the temple and read, or stay in the kitchen. So being a finalist for this award makes us feel very encouraged," nun Jigme Konchok Lhamo told Kashmir Images.

Who are notable past winners?

Since 2013, the prize has been awarded in turn to Ales Bialiatski (Belarus), Anar Mammadli (Azerbaijan), Ludmilla Alexeeva (Russian Federation), Nadia Murad (Iraq), Murat Arslan (Turkey) and Oyub Titiev (Russian Federation).

Last year's Prize was awarded

jointly to imprisoned Uyghur intellectu­al Ilham Tohti from China and the Youth Initiative for Human Rights (YIHR).

Enver Can of the Ilham Tohti Initiative, who represente­d Tohti at the event, vowed to continue efforts to free the Uyghur economist, who was jailed for life in 2014 by a Chinese court on charges of inciting separatism.

The YIHR, founded 2003 in the Balkans, describes itself as a group campaignin­g for justice, equality, democracy and peace; it places particular importance on building cooperatio­n between young activists from different countries and communitie­s in the Balkans.

Anti-communist hero

Vaclav Havel was at the forefront of the 1989 revolution that toppled four decades of com

munist rule in Czechoslov­akia before he became president.

Playwright Havel's undergroun­d theater riled authoritie­s at the time of the 1968 Prague Spring, the first flowering of a democratic movement in the country.

Havel went on to become a co-founder of the Charter 77 movement for democratic change. As the country's most renowned dissident, he suffered harassment from authoritie­s and was subjected to repeated periods of imprisonme­nt.

He served as the last president of Czechoslov­akia in 1992, and then as the first president of the Czech Republic from 1993 to 2003.

Havel died in December 2011. Eleven months later, on what would have been his 76th birthday, Prague's main airport was renamed in his honor.

 ??  ?? Women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul was released last month after nearly three years in prison
Women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul was released last month after nearly three years in prison
 ??  ?? The 800-year-old Drukpa nunnery mixes meditation with martial arts as a means of empowering its women
The 800-year-old Drukpa nunnery mixes meditation with martial arts as a means of empowering its women

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