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Amnesty human rights award to Ai Weiwei, Joan Baez

March 24, 2015

Human rights group Amnesty International has bestowed its top award for human rights on the Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei and American folk singer Joan Baez. Both won this year's Ambassador of Conscience Award.

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A combination image showing portraits of Ai Weiwei und Joan Baez
Image: picture-alliance/dpa

In a statement released Tuesday, Amnesty said the award recognized people who showed exceptional leadership in the fight for human rights.

"Through his work Ai Weiwei reminds us that the right of every individual to express their self must be protected, not just for the sake of society, but also for art and humanity," Amnesty's Secretary General Salil Shetty said in a statement.

The 57-year-old internationally renowned Chinese artist is an outspoken critic of his country's ruling Communist Party. In 2011, he was jailed for 81 days without charge and remains banned from leaving China. However, that hasn't stopped him from creatively continuing his work.

Veteran folk singer

Joan Baez, 74, has for decades been involved in the United States civil rights movement, taking part in the 1963 March on Washington alongside Martin Luther King. She has campaigned against the death penalty and in support of pacifism and gay and lesbian rights.

Of Baez, Shetty said "With her mesmerizing voice and unwavering commitment to peaceful protest and human rights for all, Joan Baez has been a formidable force for good over more than five decades."

The joint award is due to be presented in Berlin on May 21, however Ai is not expected to be able to collect it as he is still under close surveillance and unable to leave China.

Previous winners of Amnesty's top award include Pakistani teenager Malala Yousafzai, the late South African leader Nelson Mandela and Myanmar opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi.

se/msh (Reuters, epd, KNA, dpa)