SOCIAL ACTIVIST

Lidia Yusupova

1961 - Today

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Lidia Muhtarovna Yusupova (Russian: Лидия Мухтаровна Юсупова; born September 15, 1961) is a Russian-Chechen human rights advocate, currently serving as the coordinator for the law office of the Moscow-based organization Memorial. Formerly, Yusupova was the director of the Grozny office of Memorial. Currently, Yusupova is completing a two-year law fellowship in Moscow. Read more on Wikipedia

Her biography is available in 15 different languages on Wikipedia. Lidia Yusupova is the 740th most popular social activist, the 2,822nd most popular biography from Russia and the 43rd most popular Russian Social Activist.

Lidia Yusupova is a Russian-Chechen social activist known for her advocacy on behalf of victims of human rights abuses in Chechnya. She has been particularly vocal about the plight of Chechen women and children affected by the conflict in the region.

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Contemporaries

Among people born in 1961, Lidia Yusupova ranks 836Before her are Amadou Ba, Oleg Bozhev, Dirk De Wolf, Sonja Lumme, Elizabeth Gracen, and Charles O. Hobaugh. After her are Luis Doreste, Jonathan Smith, Zhang Qingwei, Claudio Vandelli, Daniel M. Tani, and Josefina Vázquez Mota.

Others Born in 1961

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In Russia

Among people born in Russia, Lidia Yusupova ranks 2,822 out of 3,761Before her are Anatoli Ivanishin (1969), Viktor Manakov (1960), Oleg Skripochka (1969), Bar Paly (1982), Sergei Furgal (1970), and Nikolay Fyodorov (1958). After her are Sasha Pivovarova (1985), Zara (1983), Kamaliya (1977), Nikolay Larionov (1957), Vladimir Karpets (1980), and Nikolay Gulyayev (1966).

Among SOCIAL ACTIVISTS In Russia

Among social activists born in Russia, Lidia Yusupova ranks 43Before her are Yelizaveta Chaikina (1918), Vladimir Kara-Murza (1981), Elizaveta Glinka (1962), Maxim Martsinkevich (1984), Stanislav Markelov (1974), and Anna Hutsol (1984). After her are Denis Kapustin (1984), Nikolay Alexeyev (1977), Suren Gazaryan (1974), Farhad Fatkullin (1979), Yelena Grigoryeva (1978), and Veronika Marchenko (1969).