The Borneo Post

Laureates to receive Nobels, except Dylan

- December 11, 2016

OSLO: In the absence of rock icon Bob Dylan, Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos would be the star of Nobel ceremonies when he receives his Peace Prize in Oslo, crowning an achievemen­t that came close to failing at the finish line.

After a first peace deal rejected by the Colombian people, Santos’s government and the Marxist FARC rebels renegotiat­ed a new peace accord that was signed on November 24 to end a five-decade conflict that has killed more than 260,000 people, left 45,000 missing and forced nearly seven million to flee their homes.

“Something that was for many Colombians and for many Latin-Americans and for the world an impossible dream just a few years ago is now reality,” Santos told reporters in the Norwegian capital on the eve of the prize ceremony.

The peace process had suffered a major setback on October 2 when Colombians narrowly rejected a first peace accord in a referendum.

While the ‘no’ vote appeared to send Santos’s chances of winning the Nobel up in smoke, the Norwegian Nobel Committee stunned world watchers five days later by awarding him the prize,

Something that was for many Colombians and for many Latin-Americans and for the world an impossible dream just a few years ago is now reality. — Juan Manuel Santos, Colombian president

arguing that Colombians had rejected the peace deal but not peace itself.

“It shows that peace is not made in one day,” Berit Reiss-Andersen, deputy chairwoman of the Nobel committee, said on Friday.

The 65-year-old laureate called the prize a ‘gift from heaven’ that gave a ‘tremendous push’ to reach a new agreement with FARC.

“People in Colombia interprete­d it as a mandate from the internatio­nal community to persevere, to continue striving to achieve a peace agreement,” Santos said.

“It encouraged me, it encouraged our negotiator­s, but particular­ly it encouraged the Colombian people to press” for a new deal, he said.

The peace deal, amended to include proposals from the opposition, calls for the rebels’ disarmamen­t and FARC’s transforma­tion into a political movement.

The Peace Prize is scheduled to be presented on Saturday at Oslo’s City Hall at a ceremony attended by the royal family, members of the Norwegian government, representa­tives of victims of the conflict, and two high-profile former FARC hostages, Ingrid Betancourt and Clara Rojas.

The Nobel prize consists of a gold medal, a diploma and a cheque for eight million Swedish kronor (US$871,000), a sum Santos promised to donate to the victims of the war.

Later on Saturday, another ceremony will be held in Stockholm where the Nobel laureates in the sciences, economics and literature will be honoured — a ceremony marked by the notable absence of this year’s literature laureate, Bob Dylan.

The first songwriter to win the prestigiou­s award, he has declined to attend the glittering ceremony due to ‘pre-existing commitment­s’.

The no-show has created a stir in Sweden, where it has been perceived as a slight towards the Swedish Academy that awards the literature prize and the Nobel Foundation.

Announced as the winner on October 14, Dylan waited almost two weeks to publicly acknowledg­e the accolade, a silence one Academy member termed ‘impolite and arrogant’.

Dylan did ultimately say he was honoured to win, but then informed the Academy in midNovembe­r that he would not be travelling to Stockholm to accept his prize.

“A slap in the face,” remarked editoriali­st Lena Mellin at one of Sweden’s biggest dailies, Aftonblade­t.

“Anyone who has ever received a prize, even if it’s just for being the best neighbour in the apartment building, knows that the least one can do is go and accept it,” she wrote.

On social media, opinions were mixed. — AFP

 ??  ?? Santos signs a protocol at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway. Behind him the Nobel Committee: Olav Njoelstad, Thorbjoern Jagland, Henrik Syse, Inger Marie Ytterhorn and Berit Reiss-Andersen. — Reuters photo
Santos signs a protocol at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo, Norway. Behind him the Nobel Committee: Olav Njoelstad, Thorbjoern Jagland, Henrik Syse, Inger Marie Ytterhorn and Berit Reiss-Andersen. — Reuters photo

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