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Musue Noha Haddad : ウィキペディア英語版
Musue Noha Haddad

Musue N. Haddad is a Liberian journalist and photojournalist.
== Career ==
Haddad began her journalism career while in exile in Accra, Ghana while the First Liberian Civil War raged in her home country. In Ghana she undertook several photojournalism projects, including ''A Day in the Lives of Two Teenage Mothers'', a documentary on the lives of two teenagers and their children, considering the impact of teenage pregnancy on mothers, their children, and society. The project led to a three-day photoexhibition in 2005. Ms. Haddad's next photojournalism project, ''Ghanaian Women and Children in Health and Development'', resulted in an exhibition to commemorate UNICEF's 50th anniversary of operations in Accra. In 1996 she also collaborated on a photojournalism research project, ''Ghanaian Funerals''. The project climaxed with an 11-day photo exhibition and 47-page book published in Germany.
Ms. Haddad returned to Liberia in early 1997 to become a Staff Writer for ''The News'', an independent national daily newspaper. At the News Haddad wrote articles critical of the government and provided information that the government had tried to suppress. In 1998, following articles Haddad wrote about a visit she made to the United States in 1998, she was accused of spying for the CIA; she received death threats and physical attacks, and left for exile in the United States. A number of her colleagues at ''The News'' were imprisoned in February 2001, and Haddad advocated internationally for their release.〔(Hellman-Hammett Grants: Short Biographies of the 2002 Recipients ), from (Human Rights Watch ) official website〕 In exile, she highlighted human rights situation in her country, drawing the international community's attention to the situation.
In the US, Haddad served as a Hubert Humphrey Fellow at the Merrill School of Journalism, University of Maryland, College Park.〔, ''Maryland Moments'' July 2002, UM Newsdesk, University of Maryland (College Park)〕 In 2000 she was a visiting scholar at the Columbia University Center for the Study of Human Rights.〔Trimmel, Suzanne "(Human Rights Leaders Arrive at SIPA for Training to Help Advance Their Cause at Home )", ''Columbia University Record'', March 3, 2000〕 In 2006 Haddad completed a Master of International Policy and Practice degree at George Washington University's Elliott School of International Affairs.

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