Human Rights Watch Honors Global Rights Defenders
Egyptian, Liberian and U.S. Activists Recognized
(Human Rights Watch)
The Perspective
Atlanta, Georgia
November 11, 2003
(New York, November 5, 2003) -- Leading human rights defenders from Egypt, Liberia, and the United States will receive Human Rights Watch's highest honor at its annual dinner on Wednesday, November 12, in New York.
"The human rights activists we honor have worked tirelessly to promote basic rights and freedoms,” said Kenneth Roth, Executive Director of Human Rights Watch. “Their courage and dedication to the cause of human rights is an inspiration to us all.”
The global human rights defenders to be honored
for the year 2003 have fought to end torture and promote women’s
rights in Egypt, defended the rule of law in Liberia during wartime,
and spotlighted the burgeoning juvenile justice crisis in the
United States.
Human Rights Watch staff members work closely with
these brave individuals as part of our defense of human rights
in more than 70 countries around the world.
The 2003 Human Rights Watch Annual Dinners in New
York, Los Angeles and San Francisco will honor:
• Dr. Aida Seif El-Dawla, for her work to
promote women’s rights and combat torture in Egypt;
• Tiawan Gongloe, for defending the rule of law and human
rights during Liberia’s violent civil war;
• Javier Stauring, for fighting to improve conditions for
incarcerated juvenile offenders in the United States.
Human Rights Watch is a nonprofit, international
monitoring group with headquarters in New York. We accept no financial
support from any government. Brief biographies of the three honorees
follow:
Dr. Aida Seif El Dawla, Egypt:
For three decades, Dr. Aida Seif El Dawla has actively fought
for human rights in Egypt and the Middle East. In 1984, Dr. Seif
El Dawla was a founder of the New Woman Research Center, which
played key role challenging the obstacles to women’s liberation
in Egypt. She also fought religious fundamentalists’ efforts
to force women – literally and figuratively -- back into
a veiled position in society. Dr. Seif El Dawla is also an active
advocate against female genital mutilation, a practice that in
the early 1990s affected an estimated 97 percent of married Egyptian
women between the ages of fifteen and forty-five. In 1993, Dr.
Seif El Dawla helped found the El Nadim Center for the Psychological
Rehabilitation of Victims of Violence. The first and only organization
of its kind in Egypt, El Nadim focuses on helping men, women,
and children tortured by Egyptian police and security forces,
and has also developed an independent program for the treatment
of female victims of all forms of violence. Dr. Seif El Dawla
is the chairperson of the Egyptian Association Against Torture.
The Association uniquely provides legal, medical, and social services
to ensure victims of torture and their families receive necessary
support. The Association also monitors and reports on cases of
torture, and presses for prosecutions and legal change.
Tiawan Gongloe
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Javier Stauring, United States
Javier Stauring is a Catholic lay chaplain who has worked to improve
the conditions in which juvenile offenders are incarcerated. Mr.
Stauring has served as a chaplain at the Central Juvenile Hall
in Los Angeles since 1995 and is now co-director of detention
ministries for the Archdiocese of Los Angeles. He also serves
as policy director for Faith Communities for Families and Children,
a Los Angeles-area interfaith coalition that advocates for youths
in the juvenile justice and child welfare systems. Shocked by
abusive detention conditions for children in Los Angeles’s
Men’s Central Jail, Mr. Stauring mobilized and led a local
coalition to press for change. After the coalition publicized
abuses in the jail, the Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors
declared the Men’s Central Jail was unfit for detainees
under the age of eighteen. Mr. Stauring’s efforts, however,
came at some risk to his professional reputation: When he spoke
at a protest in front of the jail and questioned whether conditions
contributed to two May suicide attempts, the sheriff’s department
-- in an apparent act of retaliation -- revoked his clearance
to minister to the youths at Men’s Central. Mr. Stauring
has worked effectively to promote creative approaches to crime
prevention, alternatives to incarceration, and systemic change
of the juvenile justice system.