Bono, Geldof among Nobel Peace Prize nominees (Reuters) Updated: 2006-02-25 14:36
Rock stars Bono and Bob Geldof are among 191 nominees for this year's Nobel
Peace Prize -- the second longest list in the prize's 105-year history.
Bono (L) and the Edge of U2 attend the
Carnival of Salvador in Brazil February 23, 2006.
[Reuters] | Nominations for the $1.3 million award --
considered by many to be one of the world's top accolades -- trickled in from
all corners of the globe, the director of the Norwegian Nobel Institute Geir
Lundestad said on Friday.
"There are two trends I want to point out. The first is that this is again a
very high number and that this year we have received more nominations from
different parts of the world than usual," he told Reuters.
He said 23 of the 191 nominees were organizations. In 2005 there were a
record 199 nominations. As usual Lundestad declined to give any indication of
who had or had not been nominated for the prize and instead referred to media
leaks.
U2 front man Bono and Live8 organizer Geldof have campaigned for canceling
third world debt and once again make the list.
Website reports say former mayor of New York Rudolph Giuliani and Indonesian
President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, who helped organize a peace deal in
Indonesia's tsunami-ravaged Aceh province, have also been nominated for the
peace prize.
And the Internet has been used by campaigners to drum up support for some
celebrities.
Previous Nobel Peace Prize winners include US President Theodore Roosevelt in
1906 for organizing a 1905 peace treaty between Russia and Japan and Martin
Luther King in 1964 for his civil rights campaign.
Mother Teresa, the Indian missionary, won the prize in 1979 and former USSR
President Mikhail Gorbachev won in 1990 for helping to end the Cold War. The
International Committee of the Red Cross has won the award three times in 1917,
1945 and 1963.
OPRAH, A FRIEND OF THE WORLD
The oprah4peaceprize.org website has been campaigning for US chat show host
Oprah Winfrey to make the list.
Under the rules, nominations must be postmarked no later than February 1.
Some university professors, parliamentarians, former winners and members of the
prize committee can all make nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize.
And the list of former nominees includes Nazi leader Adolf Hitler and former
Yugoslav President Slobodan Milosevic who is standing trial at the UN's war
crimes tribunal in the Hague.
The UN nuclear watchdog, the IAEA, and its director Mohamed ElBaradei won
last year's prize for their work to curb the spread of nuclear arms and ensure
the safe use of nuclear energy.
That award is likely to mean that anti-nuclear campaigners have little chance
this year as the secretive five-person Norwegian Nobel Committee tends to vary
its choices among different kinds of work for peace.
The prize winner is announced each year in mid-October, and the prize is
given to the winner in Oslo on December 10.
A Chinese dissident could be favored. Lundestad said in a 2001 speech that
the committee had to "sooner rather than later" speak out about human rights in
China.
The peace prize is named after Alfred Nobel, the Swedish philanthropist and
inventor of dynamite who died in 1896, one of the wealthiest men in Europe.
He left his money to the foundation established in his name to reward
excellence each year. The peace prize is the only one of six Nobel prizes
awarded outside Stockholm.
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