- 2006-11-01: Lázara Lizette Vila Espina – Cuba;
- 2006-11-01: Norma Angélica Cruz Córdoba – Guatemala;
- 2006-11-01: Gladira Auxiliadora Talavera García – Nicaragua;
- 2006-11-01: Marta Lucía Micher Camarena – Mexico;
- 2006-11-01: Nicole Magloire – Haiti;
- 2006-11-02: Maria LINIBI – Papua New Guinea;
- 2006-11-03: John Perkins – USA;
- 2006-11-04: Netsai Mushonga – Zimbabwe;
- 2006-11-05: William Easterly – USA;
- 2006-11-06: Hilda van Stockum – Netherlands & International (1908-2006);
- 2006-11-07: Ann Pettifor – England;
- 2006-11-08: Charlotte Bunch – USA;
- 2006-11-09: Mahmood Mamdani – USA & Uganda;
- 2006-11-10: Nino Burjanadze – Georgia;
- 2006-11-11: Nada Alfy Thabet – Egypt;
- 2006-11-12: Feroz Mehdi – Canada & Pakistan;
- 2006-11-13: Tatiana Chertoritskaya – Russian Federation;
- 2006-11-14: Ervin Laszlo – Hungary;
- 2006-11-15: Dele Olejede – Nigeria;
- 2006-11-16: Lydia Nyati-Ramahobo – Botswana;
- 2006-11-17: Wangari Maathai – Kenya;
- 2006-11-18: Betty Reardon – USA;
- 2006-11-19: Noeleen Heyzer – USA;
- 2006-11-20: Semjidmaa Damba – Mongolia;
- 2006-11-21: Vijay Vaitheeswaran – India & USA;
- 2006-11-22: Paula Makabory – Indonesia;
- 2006-11-23: Eugen Drewermann – Germany;
- 2006-11-24: Ruth Weiss – Germany;
- 2006-11-25: Ling Zhao – China;
- 2006-11-26: Lo Sai « Rose » Wu – China – Hong Kong SAR;
- 2006-11-27: Ramesh Jaura – India & Germany;
- 2006-11-28: Chin Yu Hsu – Taiwan;
- 2006-11-28: Lin Ching Hsia – Taiwan;
- 2006-11-28: Chiu Hsiang Huang – Taiwan;
- 2006-11-28: Kun Lei – Taiwan;
- 2006-11-28: Lucie Cheng – Taiwan;
- 2006-11-29: Zainah Anwar – Malaysia;
- 2006-11-30: Jerry Mander – USA.
Mois : novembre 2006
Jerry Mander – USA
Linked with Homogenization of Global Consciousness. And with Jerry Mander on May 26, 2007.
He says: « The machine is adapted for humans and humans are adapted to the machine. It is a human-machine merger ».
He says: « Corporations live in a kind of nether world where they have all the rights and protection accorded individuals by our laws. For example, you can’t regulate corporate speech in any way, because they’ve successfully become « fictional persons » and therefore have the same rights as an individual to free speech. But the difference is that the individual is only able to use handbills and maybe do a little article in a magazine now and then, while the corporations are able to spend a billion dollars in advertising to tell you what to think … Corporations will advertise whatever isn’t true because if it were true they wouldn’t have the image problem in the first place. If the corporation were a good citizen it wouldn’t need to say it is. The truth is that corporations generally act in direct opposition to nature because profit is based on the transmogrification of raw materials into a new, more salable form ». (Read the whole interview on ratville times).
Jerry Mander – USA
Jerry Mander is Director of the International Forum on Globalization (IFG). He is also the programme director for the Foundation for Deep Ecology and a senior fellow at Public Media Center. He is an author and co-editor of ‘Alternatives to Globalization – A Better World is Possible’.
Zainah Anwar – Malaysia
Linked with The Sisters in Islam SIS, with TAM – The American Muslim, with Women’s learning partnership, and with Sisters in Islam’s battle.
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « I want to live in a society that celebrates our plurality, our differences, our diversity and sees that as a blessing instead of a threat ».
She says also: (I am) … « trying to reconcile the teachings of Islam with human rights principles. It’s a work in progress … It’s very gratifying when people tell us, ‘If not for you, we would think that Islam is such a terrible religion, it is because of your work that we think that there is hope in Islam’, that Islam actually stands for justice, for equality ».
And she adds: « There are plenty of decent people out there who feel this way, it is time for us [moderate Muslims] to reclaim the religion from those who have hijacked it to perpetrate violence ».
She is SIS’ executive director and founding member. Read her text of 1997: modern and moderate Islam. The same is also on AsiaWeek.
Zainah Anwar – Malaysia
She works for The Sisters In Islam SIS (promotes women’s rights within Islam).
Read: Portraits of ordinary Muslims: Malaysia.
With a group of women, Zainah Anwar wanted to find out if it was true that Islam discriminates against women. Turning to the Koran, they found that it advocates justice, equality, dignity and freedom. So they set up Sisters in Islam (SIS) which promotes women’s rights within Islam.
Lucie Cheng – Taiwan
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « We believe that the science of learning covers both science and learning ».
Lucie Cheng – Taiwan
She works for the College of Journalism and Communications at Shixin University.
Lucie Cheng is publisher of both Li Newspaper and Pots, dean of the College of Journalism and Communications at Shixin University, president of Bibliography Literature Publishing Inc, and professor at the University of California, Los Angeles. She served Chinese workers in Chinatown in the USA before she returned to Taiwan to inherit the Li Newspaper from her father. She opened the Social Development Research Institute at Shixin University and has promoted a series of alternative multimedia courses. She has been active in social and women’s movements for 30 years. (Read all on 1000peacewomen).
Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Lucie Cheng, being certified it would be the wanted person.
Kun Lei – Taiwan
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « It is an honor to be able to speak up, for all of us ».
Kun Lei – Taiwan
She works for the Collevtive of Sex Workers and Supporters (Coswas).
Lei Kun (a pseudonym) began her transformative journey from sex worker to sex worker activist in 1997, when the Taipei City government decided to abolish licensed prostitution and declared its more than 120 licensed prostitutes illegal. She has transformed sex work into social movement activism. (Read all on 1000peacewomen).
Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Kun Lei, being certified it would be the wanted person.
Chiu Hsiang Huang – Taiwan
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
It is said about her: « Huang is the most outstanding representative of women workers in the Taiwan autonomous trade union since the lifting of martial law in 1987 ».
Chiu Hsiang Huang – Taiwan, she must be one of the two women in the first line.
Huang Chiu Hsiang was born in a tea farmers’ family in the deep mountains of Hsin Chu County. Since 1987, she has been a key trade union leader and is a founding member of the Workers Party and the Labor Party. She has excellent communication and networking skills. She is committed to fighting gender discrimination, sexual harassment and violations of women workers’ rights in factories and within trade unions, and opposing legal amendments to reduce protection of women workers. (Read all on 1000peacewomen).
Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Chiu Hsiang Huang, being certified it would be the wanted person.
Lin Ching Hsia – Taiwan
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « Both a successful therapy case and successful social action rely on the power of the persons involved to struggle against life’s limitations. ‘Struggle’ is necessary, it takes different forms ».
Lin Ching Hsia – Taiwan
She works for the Department of Applied Psychology, Fu-Jen Catholic University.
After studying overseas, Hsia Lin Ching brought new ideas to Taiwan, a country which had suffered from severe political suppression. Today, she works with sex workers and on community adult education, as well as on capacity building and social awareness among young people. She is professor in the Department of Applied Psychology, Fu-Jen Catholic University, and director of Lu Di Community University, Taipei Province.(Read all on 1000peacewomen).
Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Lin Ching Hsia, being certified it would be the wanted person.
Chin Yu Hsu – Taiwan
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « My story is nothing. The spirit of those times is very important. I often think about how suffering can make humanity shine. »
Chin Yu Hsu – Taiwan
She works for the Gu Jinliang Cultural Foundation.
Hsu Chin Yu grew up in Taiwan during the period of the Japanese colonization. In the White Terror period in the 1950s, when many intellectuals, workers and peasants were charged as spies, communist bandits and traitors, she entered a reading club, and took part in the labor movement. Later she was arrested and imprisoned for 15 years, which changed her life. (Read all on 1000peacewomen).
Sorry, I can not get other information in english about Chin Yu Hsu, being certified it would be the wanted person.
Ramesh Jaura – India & Germany
Linked with Development Watch, and with IPS Europe & Mediterranean.
The Federal President of Germany awarded Jaura the Federal Cross on Ribbon in June 1996 for promoting international understanding. At the end of that year he became a German citizen. He is a journalist with an experience of nearly 39 years, most of which he has spent reporting on global communication and development affairs, Jaura is tasked with the planning and implementation of IPS’s communication and outreach strategy.
Read: Forum calls on governments and media to protect free speech, Nov. 9, 2006.
Read: International independent media forum to be held in Istanbul, Nov. 3, 2006.
Read: Media Should Voice What Is Not Voiced, Nov. 4, 2006.
Ramesh Jaura – India & Germany
He is a member of the Board of Directors of IPS International Association and Euro-Mediterranean coordinator of the IPS news agency.
He is also Editor-in-Chief of the bilingual KOMMUNIKATION GLOBAL – COMMUNICATE WORLDWIDE, a monthly magazine for international co-operation published by IPS in Germany. He is also publisher and chief editor of The Global South, a monthly Internet publication.
Then he is Chairman of the GLOBAL COOPERATION COUNCIL that he co-founded in 1983 under the name North-South Forum with the objective of creating public awareness of the need for a genuine North-South dialogue.
The GCC FORUM, as it is called, has heads of UN secretariats in Bonn on its global advisory board. Ramesh Jaura was the first journalist from a developing region to be elected president of the prestigious Foreign Press Association (VAP) of Germany in 1981. He was re-elected in the following two years. On the occasion of the 30th anniversary of VAP, he edited and published a collection of essays titled The Giant in Chains – Foreign Correspondents’ View of the Federal Republic of Germany that aroused great interest in the media and on the political scene.
Lo Sai "Rose" Wu – China – Hong Kong SAR
She is one of the 1000 women proposed for the Nobel Peace Price 2005.
She says: « If we treasure human dignity and value life, we must take action now and make a choice to transform and resist the present forces that deny life and destroy community ».
Lo Sai « Rose » Wu – China, Hong Kong SAR
She works for the Hong Kong Christian Institute (Hkci), and for the Civil Human Rights Front (Chrf).
Rose Wu Lo Sai (54) works in the field of community development. She has brought civil and community concerns to the Church since the 80s. An educator, feminist and Christian social activist, Rose is founder and leader of several NGOs that work for gender equity, social justice, political and civil rights and against poverty. She was convener of the Civil Human Rights Front in 2002-04, an alliance of NGOs instrumental in organizing the rally on 1 July 2003 when over 500,000 people took to the streets to protest against government bureaucracy and the controversial draft National Security Bill. A devoted feminist and Christian social activist, Rose (54) began her community service as an educator.
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