Human Interests

The 11 Most Powerful Women within the World 2017 According to the New York Times

The New York Times recently published an inventory titled “11 Powerful Women We Met Around the World in 2017,” which goals to chronicle the lives of individuals from all over the world who “have led interesting lives and completed extraordinary things, or perhaps recently had a unprecedented experience.”

Here’s the total list:

  1. Manal El Sharif (Saudi Arabia)
SBS photo

Manal al-Sharif is best known for difficult the laws and customs that oppress women in her native country.

2. Emma Morano (Italy)

Photo by: wellbeing360zone
Photo by: wellbeing360zone

Emma Morano’s only achievement in life could have been perseverance. She lived to be 117, attributing her longevity to raw eggs and the absence of a husband. She died on April 15.

3. Margot Wallström (Sweden)

Photo by Reuters
Photo by Reuters

As Foreign Minister Margot Wallstrom, who escaped an abusive relationship in her twenties, is difficult stereotypes in a historically male environment.

4. Henda Ayari (France)

Photo by Closermag.fr
Photo by Closermag.fr

Henda Ayari caused a storm when she condemned radical Islam. Now, inspired by the #MeToo campaign, she has accused an Oxford professor of rape.

5. Olive Yang (Burma)

By Gabrielle Paluch
By Gabrielle Paluch

Olive Yang, born right into a royal family in Burma (now Myanmar), died on July 31 for rejecting her right to develop into a cross-dressing warlord and opium dealer.

6. Original Erdogan (Türkiye)

By Kurdish Info
By Kurdish Info

Asli Erdogan, a “dark and pessimistic” novelist, struggles to come back to terms together with her own grim experience: months spent in prison.

7. Letizia Battlagia (Italy)

By New York Times
By New York Times

Letizia Battaglia covered Palermo’s mafia wars within the Nineteen Seventies and Eighties for an area newspaper. Her photos now appear in museums and retrospectives.

8. Sinta Nuriyah (Indonesia)

Photo: Sumaryanto |  Indonesian media
Photo: Sumaryanto | Indonesian media

Sinta Nuriyah continues her family campaign in Indonesia, organizing interfaith events and establishing a network of progressive Islamic boarding schools for ladies.

9. Yu Xiuhua (China)

Author: CreditGilles Sabrié for The New York Times
Author: CreditGilles Sabrié for The New York Times

Yu Xiuhua, born with cerebral palsy, lived a quiet village life. Now she is a literary sensation whose vivid, erotic poems are “stained with blood.”

10. Alice Schwarzer (German)

Photo by Emma.de
Photo by Emma.de

Alice Schwarzer, who has campaigned for girls’s rights for years, is stunned that an “old-fashioned sexist” like Donald J. Trump could win the US presidential election.

11. Maryam Sharif (Pakistan)

Photo: Aamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images
Photo: Aamir Qureshi/Agence France-Presse — Getty Images

She recently emerged because the right-hand woman of her father, former Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. But corruption allegations have solid a shadow over her rapid rise.

Source: New York Times

admin
the authoradmin

Leave a Reply