Medicine Hat News

Nobel Prize season arrives amid war, nuclear fears, hunger

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This year’s Nobel Prize season approaches as Russia’s invasion of Ukraine has shattered decades of almost uninterrup­ted peace in Europe and raised risks of a nuclear disaster.

The Nobel committees never hint who will win the prizes in medicine, physics, chemistry, literature, economics or peace. It’s anyone’s guess who might win the awards being announced starting Monday.

Yet there’s no lack of urgent causes deserving the attention that comes with winning the world’s most prestigiou­s prize: Wars in Ukraine and Ethiopia, disruption­s to supplies of energy and food, rising inequality, the climate crisis, the ongoing fallout from the pandemic.

The science prizes reward complex achievemen­ts beyond the understand­ing of most. But the recipients of the prizes in peace and literature are often known by a global audience and the choices - or perceived omissions - have sometimes stirred emotional reactions.

Members of the European Parliament have called for Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelenskyy and the people of Ukraine to be recognized this year by the Nobel Peace Prize committee for their resistance to the Russian invasion.

While that desire is understand­able, that choice is unlikely because the Nobel committee has a history of honoring figures who end conflicts, not wartime leaders, said Dan Smith, director of the Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute.

Smith believes more likely peace prize candidates would be groups or individual­s fighting climate change or the Internatio­nal Atomic Energy Agency.

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