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Hassan is the founder of the Health Justice Initiative (HJI), [2] [3] and was part of the team that founded the 2008 Western Cape Civil Society Task Team against Xenophobia. [4] In her human rights work, she has litigated against private employers, the South African government, and pharmaceutical companies. [4]
The foundation was established by George Soros in 1993, just prior to the dismantling of apartheid and South Africa's transition to democracy. [2]From 2013 to 2019, its Executive Director was Fatima Hassan a human rights lawyer and social justice activist.
The National Agency for the Prohibition of Trafficking in Persons (NAPTIP) is a law enforcement agency of the federal government of Nigeria.It was established in July, 2003 to combat human trafficking and other similar human rights violations.
The attorney for Mrs Fatima Hassan was Igshaan Higgins of DKVG Attorneys and he was assisted by Attorneys Lynn Swartz and Faizel Bardien. Adv Tammy Carter was Counsel in the Western Cape High Court whilst Adv Wim Trengove SC assisted by Adv Kerisha Naicker in the Constitutional Court.
Justice40 is a social equity and environmental justice initiative by the Biden administration in the United States. [1] It seeks to identify disadvantage communities and prioritize federal investments to benefit these communities.
Global health advocate [33] Sitara Achakzai: Afghanistan: 1956: 2009: leading Afghan women's rights activist, member of the regional parliament in Kandahar [34] Jamila Afghani: Afghanistan: 1974 – women's rights activist, created the first "gender-sensitive training in Afghanistan for Imams" [35] [36] Mahnaz Afkhami: Iran: 1941 –
Midnight Traveler is a 2019 documentary film directed by Hassan Fazili. Filmed on three smartphones by Fazili and his wife, Fatima Hussaini, and their two daughters, it chronicles their three-year journey from their home in Afghanistan to Europe in search for asylum.
Fathima Beevi (1950): [179] First female appointed as a Justice of the Supreme Court of India (1989) Anjali Arora (1973): [180] First female visually impaired Supreme Court lawyer in India; Leila Seth: [181] [182] First female to become Chief Justice of a High Court in India (upon becoming the Chief Justice of the Himachal Pradesh High Court in ...