Samir Makdisi – Lebanon

Linked with Global Development Network GDN, and with Prodi’s message to the Lebanese people.
He says: ”the private sector in Lebanon was strong but warned that the country’s recovery depended on the government avoiding corruption in the distribution of aid money » (see the article by David Fickling, September 7, 2006 in the Guardian).

He says also: « In Lebanon, when you talk about unemployment, you are in fact talking about emigration. » (see alert.net).

And he says: “The impact of the blockade needs to be understood within the context of the overall impact of the war, Essentially, it constituted the continued loss of income. » (see IRINnews.org).

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Samir Makdisi – Lebanon.

He works for the American University of Beirut AUB, Institute of Financial Economics.

He is professor of economics, chair of the economics department, and director of the Institute of Financial Economics at the American University of Beirut. He is also a former Deputy President of the University ( 1993-1998), and a former Minister of Economy and Trade, Republic of Lebanon (1992). He has been a guest lecturer at major universities in the U.S., Europe, and Asia; a Fulbright Visiting Scholar at Georgetown University; and a fellow of the Woodrow Wilson International Center of Scholars, Washington D.C.

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"Mama" Margaretha SAKO – Indonesia

She is one of the Laureates awarded in 2006 with the Prize for Women’s Creativity in Rural Life, given annually by the Women’s World Summit Foundation WWSF

She says: ”Together we are strong. »

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« Mama » Margaretha SAKO – Indonesia

Margaretha Sako (54), usually called Mama Margaretha, is the founder and driver of the Saku Maju Group in the Manumean Village (East Nusa Tenggara Province), which has played a key role in the development of her community and served as a model for other regions of her country.

After completing junior high school, she worked with her family, then later with her husband, using slash-and-burn cultivation. In this system trees are cut down, burned, then seeds are planted for two or three years before one moves on to another area where the process starts again. However, this approach is highly damageable to the land, and after observing other villages where agroforestry was used, she became determined to encourage her community to make changes. She followed courses given by a local NGO, and then decided to start a group in her village.

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Nick (Nicholas) Turse – USA

Linked with ‘The Vietnam War Crimes You Never Heard Of‘.

He is the associate editor and research director of TomDispatch.com. He has written for the Los Angeles Times, the San Francisco Chronicle, The Nation, The Village Voice, and Daily Ireland. (See on tomdispatch, see the list of his articles there).

He is also doctoral candidate at the ‘Center for the History & Ethics of Public Health’ in the Mailman School of Public Health at Columbia University. He writes on the military-corporate complex. (See Alternet/Authors, see the list of his articles there).

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Sorry, I can not get any photo of Nick (Nicholas) Turse – USA

… but this photo about « war dead » placards (from a page of Washington Post.com, of August 31, 2004): On the second day of the Republican National Convention, Marlene Rocha reads a magazine as George Lee, Ovay Henkel and Max protest deaths in wars in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Members of the small, autonomous protest group sat silently on a subway train going uptown as police followed them.

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Dianmin Wang – China

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: “We should prove that we are able, and live not only for ourselves but also for others…. I am a woman. And I am as good as my male counterparts”.

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Dianmin Wang – China

She works for the Society for the Elderly in Wanglao Village (in chinese).

Wang Dianmin has been actively engaged in promoting the rights of her fellow villagers. She mobilizes villagers to learn government policies, laws and regulations, so that they are better equipped to protect their rights. She has also set up cultural performance groups and a society for the elderly to enrich people’s cultural life and to raise their organizing abilities. (Read all on 1000peacewomen).

Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Dianmin Wang, being certified it would be the wanted person.

Amin Maalouf – Lebanon & France

He said: « Before Fez, I had never set foot in a city, never observed the swarming activity of the alleyways, never felt that powerful breath on my face, like the wind from the sea, heavy with cries and smells. Of course, I was born in Granada, the stately capital of the kingdom of Andalus, but it was already late in the century, and I knew it only in its death agonies, emptied of its citizens and its souls, humiliated, faded, and when I left our quarter of al-Baisin it was no longer anything for my family but a vast encampment, hostile and ruined ».

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Amin Maalouf – Lebanon & France

He is Lebanese journalist and novelist, whose native language was Arabic but who writes in French. Most of Maalouf’s books have a historical setting, and like Umberto Eco, Orhan Pamuk, and Arturo Pérez-Reverte, Maalouf mixes fascinating historical facts with fantasy and philosophical ideas. In an interview Maalouf has said that his role as a writer is to create « positive myths ». Maalouf’s works, written with the skill of a master storyteller, offer a sensitive view of the values and attitudes of different cultures in the Middle East, Africa and Mediterranean world. (Read all on Pegasos).

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Martin Ennals – England (1927-1991)

Linked with International Alert.

He was not only the first Secretary General of International Alert, he was the source of Alert’s early energy, inspiration and development. His untimely death in 1991 was a severe blow to the organisation – and a great loss to the field of human rights.He was a British human rights activist.

He says: ”Without peace, there is little hope for human rights ».

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Martin Ennals – England (1927-1991)

As a pioneer of the human rights movement, Martin Ennals inspired many with his tireless devotion and life-long commitment to individual justice. Throughout his career, he was involved with a wide range of activities in his search for peaceful solutions to conflict and his defence and promotion of equal rights for all. He was instrumental in the founding or early development of many noteworthy organisations including Amnesty International, HURIDOCS, Article 19 and International Alert.

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Margaret Ntuti AKWALU – Kenya

She is one of the Laureates awarded in 2006 with the Prize for Women’s Creativity in Rural Life.

She says: ”Educate a girl and you educate a nation ».

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Margaret Ntuti AKWALU – Kenya

Chairlady of the Kieni Gia Nkoro Women’s Group in the rural district of Kianjai, Mama Ruth (65), as Margaret Ntuti Akwalu is fondly and popularly called, has made tremendous contributions towards community development in many areas. Her teaching in agriculture and development farming methods enabled her to sell the idea of cash crop growing to unwilling peasants in this rural community which resulted in a big increase of coffee plantation acreage. This became one of the greatest economic activities in the area that fed, educated and employed many people. She also uses her agricultural knowledge to improve her own farm that yields today the highest results. Margaret also preaches good hygiene practices and as a volunteer with the Kenya Family Planning Association, she strongly campaigns against retrogressive cultural practices like girl circumcision (FMG) and advocates for smaller families.

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Prize for Women's Creativity in Rural Life

by the Women’s World Summit Foundation WWSF.

Nomination Guidelines: Awarded since 1994 by the Women’s World Summit Foundation (WWSF) – an international NGO for the empowerment of women and children – the Prize ($500 each) annually honors women and women’s groups exhibiting exceptional creativity, courage and commitment in improving the quality of life in rural communities. The Prize aims to draw international attention to the laureates’ contributions to sustainable development, household food security and peace, thus generating more recognition and support for their projects. While rural women are vital in providing examples of sound practice in rural communities, they still do not have to full access tools needed for development, such as education, credit, land rights and participation in decision-making. By highlighting creative development models, innovations and experiences enhancing the quality of life in rural areas, WWSF hopes to participate in addressing the eradication of extreme poverty and help arrest the drift to urban areas.

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Anna Politkovskaya – Russian Federation (1958 – 2006)

Linked with Children of Chechen « Spetzoperations », and with Nation Non Grata.

She says: “People ask me: ‘Why do you write about this war?’ The reason is quite simple: we are contemporaries of this savage conflict and, in the end, we will have to answer for it”.

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Anna Politkovskaya – Russian Federation (1958 – 2006)

Anna Politkovskaya (born 1958) is a reputed Russian journalist. In 1999, Anna started working for the ‘Novaya Gazeta’ newspaper as a special correspondent in the Northern Caucasus. She is the author of several books on the war in Chechnya. Anna advocates for the human rights of Chechen refugees and those who have suffered because of the war. She also investigates cases of corruption among high-ranking military in Chechnya. For her journalistic achievements combined with an active anti-war stand, she has received numerous Russian and international awards.(Read all on 1000peacewomen).

MOSCOW. (RIA Novosti political commentator Andrei Kolesnikov) – Anna Politkovskaya’s assassination resembles other high-profile murders of journalists, from Dmitry Kholodov to Paul Khlebnikov.

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Mireia Uranga Arakistain – Spain

Linked with Experiencias de Mediacion Escolar en Gernika, and with Gernika Gogoratuz.

She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.

She says: « Peace is dignity, well-being, and beauty. These are concepts that must not be converted into poison ».

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Mireia Uranga Arakistain – Spain

She works for the Gernika Gogoratuz Peace Research Center (see also their Homepage), and for the Indargi Center.

Mireia Uranga, born in Spain in 1966, is a peace educator who believes in dialogue and conflict mediation. She is an adviser at Gernika Gogoratuz Peace Research Center, an independent center that applies new strategies for the development of a culture of peace. Since 2003, Mireia has also been co-director of the Indargi Center (Strength and Light) and collaborates in international projects for the development of education for peace. She is part of the European Education as a member of the Peace Education group.

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