Rabeye Kadir is
2005 Nobel Peace Prize's Candidate together with Colin Powell!
January 31, 2005 - 1:24PM
Save the Children tipped for
peace prize
Humanitarian aid group Save the Children,
Ukraine's new President Viktor Yushchenko
and former US secretary of state Colin Powell
are seen as likely candidates for the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize ahead of
tomorrow's deadline for nominations.
While Asia copes with the disastrous effects of the December 26 tsunamis, some
have argued that humanitarian organizations involved in the largest and fastest
relief effort the world has ever seen would be deserving candidates for the
prestigious prize.
Former US president Bill Clinton recently said he believed that the aid effort
would help to increase "religious reconciliation" and contribute to "reducing
the likelihood of terror".
But choosing just one relief organization would be hard, observers say.
The International Red Cross could be considered an obvious choice, but it has
already received the prize three times -- in 1917, 1944 and 1963. The founder of
the Red Cross, Henri Dunant, was also awarded the very first Peace Prize in
1901.
Many children were orphaned in the catastrophe and will need support for many
years, and thus Save The Children International could appear as a judicious
choice. The organization has operated in the hardest hit countries like
Indonesia and Sri Lanka for decades.
The annual deadline for nominations is February 1, and the laureate is announced
every year in October.
As tradition dictates, the Nobel Institute never reveals the identities of the
candidates. However, those entitled to submit nominations for the prize --
including past laureates, members of parliament and cabinet ministers from
around the world and some university professors -- are allowed to disclose their
suggestions.
The Ukrainian president is thus known to be on the list, having been nominated
by a group within the Ukrainian academic community for his peaceful fight for
democracy in his country.
But some observers stressed that it was still early days to be speculating about
who the Nobel Committee would honor later this year.
"I haven't started thinking about this year's nominees yet," admitted Stein
Toennesson, director of the Norwegian Peace Research Institute, PRIO, who is
considered a local expert on the committee's inclinations.
"If one would follow the committee's policy the last few years, it will be a
woman who represents something special."
Last year, the prize went to Kenyan environmentalist Wangari Maathai, and the
year before to Iranian activist Shirin Ebadi.
Rebiya Kadeer could be a possible
candidate. She is a prisoner of conscience in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous
Region, also known as East Turkistan, in China.
She is a prominent symbol of the Uyghurs' struggle for basic human rights, and
just a few days ago her family received the
Norwegian Rafto
Prize -- often seen as a forerunner to the Nobel Prize -- on her behalf at a
ceremony in Washington.
The Thorolf Rafto Foundation for Human Rights has earlier been awarded to two
women who later became the recipients of the Nobel Peace Prize: Burmese
opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi in 1991, and Shirin Ebadi in 2003.
The committee might however want to take the opportunity to highlight other,
more silent catastrophes, such as hunger and AIDS.
The conflict in Sudan, Africa's longest running war which ended in January when
the government and Sudan People's Liberation Army signed a peace treaty, could
also earn Colin Powell the prize, a candidate vigorously supported by US Senator
Frank Wolf.
"President Bush and Secretary Powell should be considered for the Nobel Peace
Prize for their efforts" in Sudan, he said at a peace ceremony in Naivasha,
Kenya on January 9.
The Nobel Peace Prize consists of a gold medal, a diploma and a cheque for about
10 million Swedish kronor ($A1.68 million).
- AFP