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ElBaradei gets Nobel
Peace Prize
OSLO (Norway)—Mohamed ElBaradei and the
International Atomic Energy Agency won the 2005
Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for their drive to
curb the spread of atomic weapons by using
diplomacy to resolve standoffs with Iran and
North Korea over their nuclear programs.
The Nobel Committee’s decision lent support to
negotiations and inspections, not military
action, as the best way to handle volatile
nations. It also was seen as a message to the
Bush administration, which invaded Iraq after
claiming U.N. efforts to eradicate Saddam
Hussein’s nuclear ambitions had failed and which
opposed ElBaradei’s appointment to another term.
The Nobel committee said ElBaradei and the IAEA
should be recognized for addressing one of the
greatest dangers facing the world.
“At a time when the threat of nuclear arms is
again increasing, the Norwegian Nobel Committee
wishes to underline that this threat must be met
through the broadest possible international
cooperation. This principle finds its clearest
expression today in the work of the IAEA and its
director general,” the committee said. ElBaradei
said in Vienna, Austria, that the prize “sends a
strong message” about the agency’s disarmament
efforts and will strengthen his resolve to
prevent the spread of nuclear weapons.
“The award basically sends a very strong
message, which is: Keep doing what you are
doing,” ElBaradei said. “It’s a responsibility
but it’s also a shot in the arm. They want to
give the agency and me a shot in the arm to move
forward”. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said
in Switzerland he hoped “this award wakes us all
up”.
“They need our support and I hope the leaders of
the world will pay attention,” he said.
ElBaradei, who was reappointed last month to a
third term, has contended with US opposition to
his tenure, much of it stemming from
Washington’s perception he was too soft on Iran
for not declaring it in violation of the Nuclear
Nonproliferation Treaty.
That stance blocked a US bid to haul Tehran
before the UN Security Council, where it could
face possible sanctions, for more than two
years. The IAEA passed a resolution last month
warning Tehran of such referral unless it
allayed fears about its nuclear program.
ElBaradei also refused to endorse Washington’s
contention that Iran was working to make nuclear
weapons and disputed US assertions that Saddam
Hussein’s regime in Iraq had an active atomic
weapons program — both claims that remain
unproven, despite growing suspicions about
Tehran’s nuclear agenda.
He later told the British Broadcasting Corp. he
was unfazed by the US opposition. “You cannot
satisfy everybody,” he said. “It’s a thankless
job. You will not be able to get everybody to
applaud”.
ElBaradei and the agency had been among the
names mentioned as speculation mounted in recent
days the Nobel committee would seek to honor the
victims of nuclear weapons and those who try to
contain their use. The committee has repeatedly
awarded its prize to anti-nuclear weapons
campaigners on the major anniversaries of the
1945 atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
Japan.
“This is a message to all the people of the
world: Do what you can to get rid of nuclear
weapons,” Nobel committee chairman Ole Danbolt
Mjoes said. “The people’s power is formidable”.
On the 50th anniversary, in 1995, the prize went
to anti-nuclear campaigner Joseph Rotblat and
his Pugwash group. In 1985, it went to
International Physicians for the Prevention of
Nuclear War and in 1975 to Soviet nuclear
scientist-turned-anti-nuclear campaigner Andrei
Sakharov.
“We will never give up and we must never give
in,” Mjoes said.
A record 199 nominations were received for the
prize, which includes $1.3 million, a gold medal
and a diploma. ElBaradei and the IAEA will share
the award when they receive it Dec. 10 in the
Norwegian capital.
The Nobel committee called ElBaradei “an
unafraid advocate” of new measures to stem the
proliferation of nuclear weapons.
“At a time when disarmament efforts appear
deadlocked, when there is a danger that nuclear
arms will spread both to states and to terrorist
groups, and when nuclear power again appears to
be playing an increasingly significant role,
IAEA’s work is of incalculable importance,” the
committee said.
Former chief U.N. weapons inspector Hans Blix, a
friend and colleague of ElBaradei, told The
Associated Press the award was “very encouraging
and fortunate”.
“I see it as an endorsement of the professional
and independent role of the IAEA and of
international verification in the field of
nuclear power and nonproliferation,” Blix
said.—Agencies |