German actress Maria Furtwaengler (L)and Roland-Berger-Award winner Somaly Mam of Cambodia (R) smile during the award ceremony in Berlin.
The Sun
Berlin (Nov 25, 2008) : A Cambodian woman dedicated to fighting human trafficking and the sexual exploitation of children and women received a German prize on Monday for her work.
Somaly Mam was honoured with the Roland Berger Human Dignity Award at a ceremony at Berlin's Konzerthaus attended by German President Horst Koehler.
The award, worth 1 million euros (US1.27 million), was established this year to promote peaceful cooperation in the world.
Koehler noted that the prize was going to a woman who had experienced "unspeakable suffering" after herself being forced into sexual slavery in her native country.
"Today she is fighting to ensure that other women and girls are spared this fate," the president said in remarks prepared for delivery at the awards ceremony.
"We are honouring a woman whose story is shocking but which at the same time time gives hope; a woman who through her commitment to preserve human dignity is an example to us all," he said.
Somaly Mam, who was born in 1970, managed to escape her subjugation, and has been fighting for the victims of human trafficking and slavery ever since.
Together with her supporters, she has freed thousands of children and women from sexual slavery in Asia, and helped them reintegrate into society and lead a self-determined life in dignity.
In addition to her work in the field, Somaly Mam uses her fearless voice in political lobbying and numerous campaigns against human trafficking, said the award citation.
Some two to four million women and children worldwide are sold into prostitution every year, according to figures compiled by the United
Nations. The prize is named after Roland Berger, a retired professor who set up a global marketing consultancy in 1967.
Berlin (Nov 25, 2008) : A Cambodian woman dedicated to fighting human trafficking and the sexual exploitation of children and women received a German prize on Monday for her work.
Somaly Mam was honoured with the Roland Berger Human Dignity Award at a ceremony at Berlin's Konzerthaus attended by German President Horst Koehler.
The award, worth 1 million euros (US1.27 million), was established this year to promote peaceful cooperation in the world.
Koehler noted that the prize was going to a woman who had experienced "unspeakable suffering" after herself being forced into sexual slavery in her native country.
"Today she is fighting to ensure that other women and girls are spared this fate," the president said in remarks prepared for delivery at the awards ceremony.
"We are honouring a woman whose story is shocking but which at the same time time gives hope; a woman who through her commitment to preserve human dignity is an example to us all," he said.
Somaly Mam, who was born in 1970, managed to escape her subjugation, and has been fighting for the victims of human trafficking and slavery ever since.
Together with her supporters, she has freed thousands of children and women from sexual slavery in Asia, and helped them reintegrate into society and lead a self-determined life in dignity.
In addition to her work in the field, Somaly Mam uses her fearless voice in political lobbying and numerous campaigns against human trafficking, said the award citation.
Some two to four million women and children worldwide are sold into prostitution every year, according to figures compiled by the United
Nations. The prize is named after Roland Berger, a retired professor who set up a global marketing consultancy in 1967.
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