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2012-09-18 17:39:59
Somali woman wins U.N. award
GENEVA, Sept 18 (Reuters) - Hawa Aden Mohamed won the United Nations refugee agency's
Nansen Refugee Award on Tuesday for her work in helping thousands of Somali women
and girls, many of them rape victims, start new lives in their battered homeland.
Mohamed, 63, is a former Somali refugee who returned from safety in Canada to her
war-torn country in 1995, launching an education programme in Puntland to shelter
and train Somalis who have fled war, famine and violence, it said. "When Hawa Aden
Mohamed rescues a displaced girl, a life is turned around," U.N. High Commissioner
for Refugees Antonio Guterres said in a statement. Known as "Mama Hawa", she founded
the Galkayo Education Centre for Peace and Development which has assisted more than
215,000 displaced and victims of violence since 1999, it said. "In a society like
Somalia, it's very often that a woman or a girl is raped and they are severely marginalised
thereafter. So what she has done is given them is a home, a new start, hope for a
new life and their dignity back," UNHCR spokeswoman Melissa Fleming told a news briefing.
Young Somali boys also receive vocational training in carpentry and welding to keep
them off the streets and avoid them falling prey to criminal or armed groups, the
agency said. Somalia's new president Hassan Sheikh Mohamud took office on Sunday,
calling for an end to terrorism and piracy in a nation mired in conflict for more
than two decades. More than two million people have been displaced. Recent laureates
include the late U.S. Senator Edward Kennedy for sponsoring asylum legislation and
former British soldier Chris Clark for removing mines in Lebanon, allowing displaced
people to return home after Israel's 2006 invasion. Mohamed, currently in hospital
in Kenya recovering from surgery, is expected to attend the awards ceremony in Geneva
on Oct. 1, Fleming said.