FRI 19 - 4 - 2024
 
Date: Oct 9, 2011
Source: The Daily Star
Yemen wins first Nobel as committee honors African, Arab women

By Alastair Macdonald, Gwladys Fouche

REUTERS
OSLO: Declaring women’s rights vital for world peace, the Nobel Committee awarded its annual Peace Prize Friday to three indomitable female campaigners against war and oppression – a Yemeni and two Liberians, including that country’s president.


Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf, the first woman freely elected as a head of state in Africa, shared the award worth $1.5 million with compatriot Leymah Gbowee, who promoted a “sex strike” among efforts to end Liberia’s civil war, and Yemen’s Tawakul Karman, who called her honor “a victory for the Arab Spring.”


“We cannot achieve democracy and lasting peace in the world unless women obtain the same opportunities as men to influence developments at all levels of society,” Norwegian Nobel Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland told reporters. “This is to highlight an incredibly important issue all over the world but especially in Africa and in the Arab world.”


Karman, 32, an Islamist journalist dubbed the “Mother of the Revolution,” has been a key figure in protests in the capital Sanaa this year. “This is a victory for the Arab Spring in Tunis, Egypt, Libya, Syria and Yemen,” she told Reuters. “This is a message that the era of Arab dictatorships is over.”


Typically, the mother-of-three was out demonstrating in a central square in Sanaa for the departure of veteran Yemeni President Ali Abdullah Saleh when she heard the news.


Johnson-Sirleaf, 72, a former World Bank economist known as the “Iron Lady” by opponents, called the prize a recognition of her nation’s “many years of struggle for justice, peace and promotion of development” since a brutal decade of civil war.


“The credit goes to the Liberian people,” she said in the capital Monrovia after hearing the announcement.
Gbowee, 39, received the news belatedly when she switched on her mobile phone after landing in New York on a book tour.


“All I keep hearing in my head is the song of praise to God,” she said. “My work is for survival for myself and for other women … With or without a Nobel I will still do what I do because I am a symbol of hope in my community on the continent, in a place where there is little to be hopeful for.”


Her Women For Peace movement is credited with helping end Liberia’s war in 2003. Starting with prayers and songs at a market, she also urged wives and girlfriends of leaders of the warring factions to deny them sex until they laid down their arms.


Jagland rejected suggestions the panel’s decision might skew Liberia’s election Tuesday by giving Johnson-Sirleaf a boost in her bid for a second term.


The trio named by the Norwegian committee, whose other four members are all women, follow a dozen women among 85 men to have previously won the prize in its 110-year history.
The Nobel panel hoped the award would help to end “the suppression of women that still occurs in many countries, and to realize the great potential for democracy and peace that women can represent.”


The committee said all three women were rewarded from the bequest left by Swedish dynamite inventor Alfred Nobel for “their nonviolent struggle for the safety of women and for women’s rights to full participation in peacebuilding work.”


“This [Nobel prize] will encourage other women in Africa to forge for peace in their countries and it will boost women’s empowerment initiatives across Africa,” said Lena Cummings, the coordinator of Women in Peacebuilding Network (WIPNET) that works on peace and conflict resolution issues in Liberia.


European Union foreign policy chief Catherine Ashton said: “I view this award as a reflection of the hopes that all three prizewinners have raised globally, through their relentless fight for peace, democracy and the improvement of women’s rights in their own countries and beyond.”


The prize was less controversial than in the last two years. In 2010, China was outraged and imposed sanctions on Norway after the award went to jailed dissident Liu Xiaobo.
The award to Barack Obama in 2009, just months after he became U.S. president, amazed many, not least the new occupant of the White House. It recognized, among other things, promises he made of promoting democracy in the Arab world.


Many Arabs were disappointed by what they saw as Obama’s slowness in switching Washington’s allegiance from rulers like Egypt’s Hosni Mubarak and Yemen’s Saleh, a U.S. ally against Al-Qaeda, to the crowds of demonstrators trying to oust them.


Obama’s predecessor, as both a Democratic president and a Peace Prize laureate, Jimmy Carter urged him to make good on promises, including about democracy in the Middle East. “It was given primarily because of some of the commitments he had made verbally,” Carter told Reuters Thursday. “I hope that some of those promises will be realized.”


Among those who welcomed this year’s award was German Chancellor Angela Merkel, viewed as the most powerful woman in Europe, who said: “This will hopefully encourage many women, but also many men, around the world to campaign for freedom and democracy and against injustice.”
U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said: “Above all, it underscores the vital role that women play in the advancement of peace and security, development, and human rights.”


Amnesty International secretary-general Salil Shetty said: “This Nobel Peace Prize recognizes what human rights activists have known for decades … the promotion of equality is essential to building just and peaceful societies worldwide.”



 
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