News | Syria
DUBLIN — Syrian woman blogger Razan Ghazzawi has been
honoured with this year's Human Rights Defenders at Risk award by the
Dublin-based Front Line Defenders foundation, the group announced on Friday. Ghazzawi, who has become a symbol of the Syrian uprising, is
currently on trial before a military court charged with "possessing
prohibited materials with the intent to disseminate them". Front Line said she was presented with the award at a
ceremony in Dublin's City Hall by Aryeh Neier, president of the Open Societies
Foundations and a founder of Human Rights Watch, for her "exceptional contribution"
to human rights. Her colleague Dlshad Othman, who has himself been a target
for the Syrian authorities because of his human rights work and had to leave
Syria two months ago for his own security, accepted the award on Ghazzawi's
behalf. In a statement read out on Ghazzawi's behalf at the ceremony
she said she saw the award as being was for all citizen journalists "who
died trying to tell the world what's happening in Syria, when the traditional
media have failed to do so". "Syrian citizen journalists and filmmakers tell the
revolution in all its colours, through the good times and the bad times. And
many have died doing so," she said. Ghazzawi and six other female activists were recently freed
from detention. They had been arrested during a raid on the Syrian Centre
for Media and Freedom of Expression. Her colleague and director of SCM, Mazen Darwish is
currently being held in incommunicado in detention with four other colleagues. Front Line said Ghazzawi is on trial because she used her
blog and the power of social media to "expose the crimes being committed
by the Syrian regime". "The ongoing trial is an attempt by the Government to
crackdown on free speech activists and restrict the flow of information out of
Syria," Front Line said. Front Line founder and executive director Mary Lawlor said
the fact the foundation had received more nominations for the award that ever
before - 107 from 46 countries - was a sign of the increased levels of
repression faced by human rights defenders in many countries. "Razan Ghazzawi is typical of the selfless courage
shown by all the human rights defenders nominated for this year's award. "She has challenged the repressive forces of the Syrian
regime and has chosen not to hide behind a pseudonym but to speak out publicly.
In doing so she has become a force to be reckoned with," Lawlor said. Since the start of the Syrian uprising Ghazzawi, an English
literature graduate from Damascus University, has become a symbol of the
resistance to the repression by the Syrian Government. Front Line said she is known for her fierce criticism of the
government, mostly expressed on her blog Razaniyyat and via her twitter account
@RedRazan. Social networking sites have played a key role in mobilising
the anti-regime protests which have swept Syria since March, 2010. Thousands of
people have been killed, according to the United Nations, in Syria's crackdown
on dissent. Foreign journalists are mostly banned from covering the
unrest, leaving the international media dependent on reports from activists and
videos on YouTube and other Internet sites, posted at the risk of arrest. |







