Oslo - The selection of a Nobel peace laureate often
generates controversy and questions as to why an individual was
slected over another.
The 2008 peace laureate, veteran Finnish mediator and former
president Martti Ahtisaari, was seen as a traditional choice but also
generated some doubts.
Speculation before the announcement Friday had centred on
dissidents in China and activists in Russia. Some media reports even
suggested China would not view kindly the possible choice of a
dissident.
Ole Danbolt Mjos, chairman of the five-member Norwegian Nobel
Committee, was asked Friday if the committee members had
avoided controversy by picking a 'safe' candidate.
Mjos said the committee has in the past 'dared' to make selections
that have not always been appreciated by rulers, mentioning German
peace activist Carl von Ossietzky in 1935, Russian dissident Andrei
Sacharov in 1975, the Dalai Lama in 1989 and Iran's Shirin Ebadi in
2003 as examples.
'This means that the Norwegian Nobel Committee does dare
everything, both in the past and for the future,' Mjos told reporters
in Oslo.
The committee - appointed by the Norwegian parliament - has in
recent years also been criticized for moving towards a wider peace
concept.
Examples of that trend include the 2004 selection of Kenyan human
rights activist and environmentalist Wangari Maathai and the 2006
choice of Muhammad Yunus of Bangladesh who spearheaded the Grameen
Movement micro-banking system were part of that wider concept.
The 2007 peace prize, shared by the United Nations climate
body the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change (IPCC) and Al Gore
of the United States for their work on climate change, also drew
fire.
Mjos in 2007 said the choice of Gore was not a barb aimed at US
President George W Bush, whom Gore narrowly lost out to.
'A peace prize is never criticism of anyone, a peace prize is a
positive message and support to all peace campaigners in the world,'
he said then.
A Norwegian critic of the committee is Fredrik Heffermehl,
honorary chairman of the Norwegian Peace Committee that is an
umbrella group of some 20 organizations.
Heffermehl has argued that the committee is not true to the
intentions of Alfred Nobel, the Swedish industrialist and inventor of
dynamite who endowed the Nobel prizes first awarded 1901.
The selection of Ahtisaari was another 'wrong choice,' Heffermehl
told news agency NTB, who in a recent book has said less than half of
the selections since 1948 were not in accordance with Nobel's will.
The Nobel committee citation said that Ahtisaari's efforts 'have
contributed to a more peaceful and to 'fraternity between nations' in
Alfred Nobel's spirit.'
The choice of Ahtisaari honoured an 'outstanding mediator,' Mjos
said, noting his 'untiring' efforts.
While Ahtisaari has been widely praised for his role in Namibia's
independence in 1990 and the 2005 peace deal in the Indonesian
province of Aceh, his efforts in finding a solution to the status of
the Serbian province of Kosovo angered Belgrade and Serbia's
traditional ally, Moscow.
'I can't understand why Ahtisaari was awarded with the Nobel prize
or other prizes' Russian ambassador to NATO, Dmitri Rogosin, was
quoted as saying by the Interfax news agency.
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