UN names Human Rights Prize winners for 2018
The United Nations has hailed the "inspiring" work of four individuals
and organisations as it announced the winners of its Prize in the Field
of Human Rights for 2018.

The honour was given on Friday to Asma Jahangir, the late Pakistani
lawyer and leading human rights defender, along with Tanzanian activist
Rebeca Gyumi, Brazil's first indigenous lawyer Joenia Wapichana and
Irish human rights groups Front Line Defenders.
"Today I announced the 2018 winners of the UN Human Rights Prize," Maria
Fernanda Espinosa, UN General Assembly president, wrote on Twitter.
"I am proud to recognise the contributions of individuals and
organisations that promote and protect human rights. Your work is an
inspiration to us all," she said.
Today I announced the 2018 winners of the @UN Human Rights Prize. I
am proud to recognise the contributions of individuals &
organizations that promote & protect human rights @RebecaGyumi
@Asma_Jahangir Joênia Wapichana @FrontLineHRD Your work is an
inspiration to us all #UN4ALL
— UN GA President (@UN_PGA) October 25, 2018
Jahangir is the fourth Pakistani woman to receive the prestigious award,
which recognises individuals or organisations for outstanding
achievements in the field of human rights and is given every five years.
Past winners include Mauritania's Biram Dah Abeid, Finland's Liisa
Kauppinen, Khadija Ryadi of Morocco, Pakistan's Malala Yousafzai and the
Supreme Court of Justice of Mexico.
This year's award ceremony will be held at the UN headquarters in New
York on Human Rights Day, which is marked globally on December 10.
Find out more about this year's winners below.
Asma Jahangir
Known for her persistence on advocating for issues such as women's
rights and discrimination against minorities, Jahangir was the first
woman to serve as president of the Supreme Court Bar Association of
Pakistan.
Critical of Pakistan's military, intelligence and armed groups, she
braved death threats, imprisonment and beatings as she worked tirelessly
to protect human rights.
Jahangir helped bonded labourers get legislation passed through parliament and worked on blasphemy cases.
People worldwide reacted to the news of her death in February, with UN
Secretary-General Antonio Guterres saying the world had lost a "human
rights giant".
Thousands of people attended her funeral in the eastern city of Lahore.
Rebeca Gyumi
Gyumi is the founder of the Msichana Initiative in Tanzania, a local NGO that advocates for girls' right to education.
A lawyer by profession, Gyumi won a landmark case in 2016 on child
marriages after petitioning against the 1971 Tanzania Marriage Act which
allowed girls as young as 14 to get married.
For her work on girls' rights, the 31-year-old won the UNICEF Global
Goals Award in 2016 and was named Woman of the Year by New African Women
magazine.
Joenia Wapichana
In Brazil's elections earlier this month, Wapichana became the first indigenous woman to be elected to the Congress.
Ten years ago, she was the first indigenous lawyer to speak in front of
the Supreme Federal Court and more than a decade before that she became
the first indigenous person to graduate from law school in the country.
"I'm very happy to be answering the call of all the indigenous people
who yearn to have their rights represented in Congress," she told Al
Jazeera just after winning her seat.
"People had the hope to believe we can create positive change, that we can have a voice there to represent our rights."
Front Line Defenders
Ireland-based charity Front Line Defenders provides support to human
rights defenders whose lives and health are at risk through advocacy,
grants, security and training.
The group was founded in Ireland's capital, Dublin, in 2001.
"We are hugely honoured to receive this prize," Executive Director Andrew Anderson said.
"Front Line Defenders dedicates this prize to human rights defenders at
risk around the world, who struggle every day to advance and defend the
rights for their communities," the group said in a statement.
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