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・ Krystyna Drohojowska
・ Krystyna Dąbrowska
・ Krystyna Dąbrowska (chess player)
・ Krystyna Feldman
・ Krystyna Guzik
・ Krystyna Hołuj-Radzikowska
・ Krystyna Hryshutyna
・ Krystyna Jakubowska
・ Krystyna Janda
・ Krystyna Kersten
・ Krystyna Klimczak
・ Krystyna Kobylańska
・ Krystyna Krahelska
・ Krystyna Krupa
・ Krystyna Kuperberg
Krystyna Kurczab-Redlich
・ Krystyna Lubomirska
・ Krystyna Lubomirska (d. 1645)
・ Krystyna Lubomirska (d. 1669)
・ Krystyna Machnicka-Urbańska
・ Krystyna Mikołajewska
・ Krystyna Moszumańska-Nazar
・ Krystyna Ostromęcka
・ Krystyna Ozga
・ Krystyna Radziwiłł
・ Krystyna Skarbek
・ Krystyna Skowrońska
・ Krystyna Strasz
・ Krystyna Szumilas
・ Krystyna Szymańska-Lara


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Krystyna Kurczab-Redlich : ウィキペディア英語版
Krystyna Kurczab-Redlich
Krystyna Kurczab-Redlich (born 1954) is a Polish journalist and author.
As a correspondent in Russia for the Polish media, she has written documentary films on Chechnya investigating alleged human rights abuses by the Russian army. In 2000 she published ''Pandrioszka'', an account of life in contemporary Russia.〔 Her 2007 book ''Głową o mur Kremla'' ("Banging one's head against the wall of the Kremlin"),〔 a history of Russia from the 1980s to the present, earned her the nickname ''the Polish Politkovskaya'' (''Polska Politkowska'').
Kurczab-Redlich received the Kazimierz Dziewanowski Award for her work as a foreign correspondent and the Melchior Wańkowicz Award for her reports from Chechnya. In 2005 the Chechen organization Echo of War, along with Amnesty International and the Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights, nominated her for the Nobel Peace Prize.〔
==References==




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