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Shirin Ebadi, Iranian rights activist, wins Nobel peace prize
Oslo, Oct 10: Iranian human rights activist and feminist lawyer, Shirin Ebadi, was awarded the 2003 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo today, becoming the first Muslim woman to win the honour in the prize`s 102-year history.
Oslo, Oct 10: Iranian human rights activist
and feminist lawyer, Shirin Ebadi, was awarded the 2003 Nobel
Peace Prize in Oslo today, becoming the first Muslim woman
to win the honour in the prize's 102-year history.
Ebadi, 56, was given the prize "for her efforts for
democracy and human rights," particularly for women and
children in her country, which has been under Islamic rule
since its 1979 revolution, the Nobel committee said.
In 1974 she became Iran's first woman judge, but lost
that post in the revolution five years later when Islamic
clerics took over and decreed that women could not preside
over courts.
In a reaction broadcast on Norwegian Radio, Ebadi
said her win was "very good for me, very good for human
rights and very good for democracy in Iran."
She added that she was "very glad and proud" and
hoped the fame the prize brought would help her work in her
country.
"My problem is not with Islam, it's with the culture of patriarchy," Ebadi told Britain's Guardian newspaper in June. "Practices such as stoning have no foundation in the Koran."
Bureau Report
"My problem is not with Islam, it's with the culture of patriarchy," Ebadi told Britain's Guardian newspaper in June. "Practices such as stoning have no foundation in the Koran."
Bureau Report