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Nobel laureate urges World to fight poverty
Foreign Desk Report
STOCKHOLM (Sweden)—Bangladeshi economist Muhammad Yunus accepted the
Nobel Peace Prize on Sunday, saying he hoped the award would inspire
“bold initiatives” to fight poverty and eradicate the root causes of
terrorism.
Yunus, 66, shared the award with his Grameen Bank for helping people
rise above poverty by giving them microcredit — small, usually unsecured
loans. “I firmly believe that we can create a poverty free world if we
collectively believe in it,” Yunus said after accepting the prize at
City Hall in Oslo, Norway. “The only place you would be able to see
poverty is in a poverty museum.”
The Nobel Prizes, announced in October, are always presented in Oslo and
Stockholm, Sweden, on Dec. 10 to mark the anniversary of the 1896 death
of their creator, Alfred Nobel, a Swedish industrialist who invented
dynamite and stipulated the dual ceremonies in his will.
The winners for literature, medicine, physics and economics will receive
their awards later Sunday at a royal ceremony in Stockholm’s blue-hued
concert hall. Each award carries a purse of $1.4 million, a diploma and
a gold medal. The first prizes were handed out in 1901. This year’s
laureates include a novelist who explored Turkey’s clash of cultures and
American scientists who helped cement the big-bang theory of the
universe and broke new ground in genetic research. Yunus said ending
poverty was the best way to fight terrorism.
“We must address the root causes of terrorism to end it for all time,”
he said. “I believe putting resources into improving the lives of poor
people is a better strategy than spending it on guns.” Grameen Bank, set
up in 1983, was the first lender to provide microcredit, giving very
small loans to poor Bangladeshis who did not qualify for loans from
conventional banks. No collateral is needed, and repayment is based on
an honor system, with a nearly 100 percent repayment rate.
Yunus said the idea has spread around the world, with similar programs
in almost every country. Clad in a traditional Bangladeshi sleeveless
jacket, Yunus accepted his half of the $1.4 million prize from awards
committee chairman Ole Danbolt Mjoes. Board member Mosammat Taslima
Begum, wearing a traditional dress in red with a green shawl, accepted
the other half of the award on behalf of Grameen bank, saying she
dedicated it to all Bangladeshis. Mjoes said the award was an
outstretched hand to the Islamic world in an era where Muslims are often
demonized because of terrorism. “The peace prize to Yunus and Grameen
Bank is also support for the Muslim country of Bangladesh, and for the
Muslim environments in the world that are working for dialogue and
collaboration,” Mjoes said
Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk won the literature prize for a body of work
that illustrates the struggle to find a balance between East and West.
U.S. researchers have long dominated the science awards, and swept them
all this year for the first time since 1983. The Nobel Prize in medicine
went to Andrew Z. Fire and Craig C. Mello for discovering a powerful way
to turn off the effect of specific genes. John C. Mather and George F.
Smoot won the physics prize for work that helped cement the big-bang
theory of how the universe was created.
Roger D. Kornberg won the prize in chemistry for his studies of how
cells take information from genes to produce proteins, a process that
could provide insight into defeating cancer and advancing stem cell
research.
Economics winner Edmund S. Phelps was cited for research into the
relationship between inflation and unemployment, giving governments
better tools to formulate economic policy. The economics award is not an
original Nobel Prize, but was created by the Bank of Sweden in 1968. |