The Secretary of State's 2009 International Women of Courage Awards. In celebration of International Women’s Day, the Department of State announces the recipients of the third annual Secretary of State’s Award for International Women of Courage. This is the only award within the Department of State that pays tribute to outstanding women leaders worldwide. It recognizes the courage and leadership shown as they struggle for social justice and human rights.
Norma Cruz is on the forefront of women who are fighting on behalf of victims of violence and sexual abuse.
(link: http://guatemala.usembassy.gov/)
For more on Norma Cruz, see below.
Link: http://www.state.gov/g/wi/iwoc/119946.htm
Norma Cruz, Guatemala
“We’re not going to allow one more woman to die.”
In Guatemala, an average of two women each day die a violent and often grisly death. The number is increasing, and has more than doubled since 2000. While murders of men are also increasing, the killings of women are particularly gruesome, often involving rape, torture, mutilation, and dismemberment.
Norma Cruz, co-founder and director of the NGO “Survivors Foundation,” has provided emotional, social, and legal support to hundreds of victims of domestic violence and sexual abuse and to the families of murdered women. In 2007 alone, her foundation helped investigate, prosecute, and convict 30 individuals accused of murdering women. The NGO also runs a victims’ shelter – one of only a handful in the country -- and also fights to protect mothers whose babies are allegedly stolen for an illegal and lucrative supply chain for international adoptions.
The increasing number of killings of women in Guatemala, Ms. Cruz says, is tied both to the poverty that is the aftermath of Guatemala’s civil war and to narcotrafficking. Gangsters reportedly kill the female family members of rival gangs, often as an initiation rite, and without fear of legal retribution. These crimes are under-reported and under-investigated, and less than three percent are prosecuted. The more common police response, according to a former member of the Guatemala Human Rights Commission’s delegation, is to assert that the victim must have been a prostitute or a gang member, have engaged in other criminal activities, or have provoked the killer with her infidelity.
Because of the pressure of groups like the Survivors Foundation, the UN-led International Commission Against Impunity in Guatemala (CICIG) was approved by the Guatemalan Congress in August, 2008. Although it is too early to gauge the effect of the Commission, it has the potential to be an important tool in combating the gender-based targeted killing of women.
These advances come at enormous personal risk to both the activists and their families. But, Ms. Cruz told the Human Rights Commission delegate, “We’re not going to allow one more woman to die.”
Ms. Cruz was recently the subject of an urgent Amnesty International appeal, after one of her relatives was abducted and assaulted in what appeared to be an attack aimed at intimidating her and the foundation. She herself has received numerous death threats, and her home and office have been surveilled.
Ms. Cruz’ courageous commitment to the Survivors Foundation despite these risks has given voice to hundreds of victims, generated positive change, and inspired other groups and individuals, within the country and outside, to work to turn the tide of violence and impunity in Guatemala.
Posted by Marie at March 7, 2009 08:18 AMIf I'm not mistaken, she also works with women whose children have gone missing and has helped some women recover children who were illegally trafficked for adoption.
Posted by: Lee at March 8, 2009 11:07 PMIt is women like Ms. Cruz that motivate me to do more with my life. It makes me contemplate how I can affect those around me in a positive way as well as having the courage to speak out against those that may harm us.
Posted by: Lisa at March 9, 2009 10:27 AMLee,
You are not mistaken! Norma Cruz is a hero and was the one in Guatemala who helped the birth mom of my (lost) referral find her two toddler daughters that both she and I had been looking for, for over a year! Norma Cruz was a force within the police departmet and the court where the judge agreed to return the children who had been forced from her,...back to their mother that very day in court last February! Norma Cruz is strong and full of courage. She believes in what is right, and despises what is wrong, with regard to woman in Guatemala who have been victims of violent acts! I wish I could meet her one day!
She is one to watch, one to learn from, and one to be impressed by!
Elizabeth Emanuel
Posted by: Elizabeth at March 10, 2009 08:42 AM