
Another woman, Malebogo Molefhe, of Botswana, became an advocate for female victims of gender-based violence after she was attacked, including being shot eight times, by an ex-boyfriend in 2009. She uses a wheelchair due to injuries suffered during the assault.
During brief remarks, Mrs. Trump asked the audience to imagine being any of the 13 women on stage with her.
“Ask yourself if you would have the fortitude of spirit, the courage of your convictions and the enormous inner strength required to stand up and fight against such overwhelming odds,” she said. “Amazingly, each of our honorees has courageously answered ‘Yes’ to those questions.”
Wednesday’s honorees hail from Bangladesh, Botswana, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Iraq, Niger, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Sri Lanka, Syria, Turkey, Vietnam and Yemen. In April, the women will take part in a State Department-sponsored exchange program in several U.S. cities.
More than 100 women from more than 60 countries have been recognized with courage awards since 2007, the department said.
After joining Shannon at the State Department, the first lady later appeared at a White House panel discussion on women’s empowerment, where Trump introduced his wife, a former model, as a “very highly accomplished woman.”
Since her husband’s Jan. 20 inauguration, the first lady has lived mostly at the family’s Trump Tower penthouse in midtown Manhattan with the couple’s son, Barron, 11. She often meets the president in Palm Beach, Florida, when he spends weekends at his waterfront estate there.
Trump has said his wife and son will move to the White House after Barron’s school year ends.
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