Salima Ghezali (born 1958 in Bouira, Algeria) is an Algerian journalist and writer.[1]
A founding member of Women in Europe and the Maghreb, president of the association for the advancement of women, editor of the women's magazine NYSSA, which she founded, and editor of the French-language weekly La Nation, Salima Ghezali is an activist of women's rights and human rights and democracy in Algeria.
In 1997 Ghezali won the Sakharov Prize,[2] as well as the Olof Palme Prize.
References
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- Cyril Ramaphosa (1987)
- UN Peace Keeping Operation (1988)
- Václav Havel (1989)
- Harlem Désir, SOS Racisme (1990)
- Amnesty International (1991)
- Arzu Abdullayeva, Anahit Bayandour (1992)
- Students for Sarajevo (1993)
- Wei Jingsheng (1994)
- Fatah Youth, Israeli Labor Young Leadership, Peace Now (1995)
- Casa Alianza, Bruce C. Harris (1996)
- Salima Ghezali (1997)
- Veran Matić, Senad Pećanin, Viktor Ivančić (1998)
- Kurdo Baksi, Björn Fries, Klippan Parent Group (1999)
- Bryan Stevenson (2000)
- Fazle Hasan Abed (2001)
- Hanan Ashrawi (2002)
- Hans Blix (2003)
- Lyudmila Alexeyeva, Sergei Kovalev, Anna Politkovskaya (2004)
- Aung San Suu Kyi (2005)
- Kofi Annan, Mossaad Mohamed Ali (2006)
- Parvin Ardalan (2007)
- Denis Mukwege (2008)
- Carsten Jensen (2009)
- Eyad al-Sarraj (2010)
- Lydia Cacho, Roberto Saviano (2011)
- Radhia Nasraoui, Waleed Sami Abu AlKhair (2012)
- Rosa Taikon (2013)
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Persondata |
Name |
Ghezali, Salima |
Alternative names |
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Short description |
Algerian writer |
Date of birth |
1958 |
Place of birth |
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Date of death |
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Place of death |
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