Seeking Justice for Victims of Femicide and Human Trafficking in Mexico

Finalist of the Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders, Norma Ledezma, will on this guest lecture speak about seeking justice for the families and victims of femicide, disappearance and human trafficking in Mexico.
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Date: February 25

Time: 12:00 - 13.15

Place: Norwegian Centre for Human Rights, Domus Juridica, Kristian Augusts gate 17, room 4110, 4. etasje

Mexico is encountering an endemic wave of violence, particularly experienced by women and termed femicide. The term is generally understood to involve intentional murder of women because they are women, but broader definitions include any killings of woman and or girls.

Norma Ledezma began her career as a human rights defender after her daugther, Paloma, disappeared on her way home from school in Chihuahua, Mexico. Since that moment, she has dedicated herself to ending impunity by seeking justice for the families and victims of femicide, disappearance and human trafficking and she has supported over 200 investigations into cases of femicide and disappearances, on behalf of both male and female victims. As a party in the case over her daughter´s murder, which was brought before the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Norma Ledezma is responsible for the creation of a Special Prosecutor office for Women Victims of Violence in her native state of Chihuahua.

The Martin Ennals Award is an annual prize for human rights defenders. Finalists and the laureate are selected by a jury of ten of the world's leading human rights NGOs. The Award provides protection and support to human rights defenders who are at risk.

The guest lecture is arranged by the Norwegian Human Rights Fund and the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights.

Details

25. February 2020 12:00 - 13:30
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