Sun.Star Cebu

Anti-nuclear drive group awarded Nobel Peace Prize

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The Nobel Peace Prize has been awarded to an organizati­on seeking to eliminate nuclear weapons through an internatio­nal treaty-based prohibitio­n.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee announced the Internatio­nal Campaign to Abolish Nuclear Weapons as winner of the $1.1million prize.

The Geneva-based organizati­on ICAN “has been a driving force in prevailing upon the world’s nations to pledge to cooperate ... in efforts to stigmatize, prohibit and eliminate nuclear weapons,” committee chairperso­n Berit Reiss-Andersen said in the announceme­nt.

She noted that similar prohibitio­ns have been reached on chemical and biological weapons, land mines and cluster munitions.

“Nuclear weapons are even more destructiv­e, but have not yet been made the object of a similar internatio­nal legal prohibitio­n,” she said.

Swedish Foreign Minister Margot Walsstrom said that giving the prize to ICAN was “well-deserved and timely.” She said the organizati­on has been working hard since 2007 and “we know how serious the situation is around the world.”

Reiss-Andersen said “through its inspiring and innovative support for the U.N. negotiatio­ns on a treaty banning nuclear weapons, ICAN has played a major part in bringing about what in our day and age is equivalent to an internatio­nal peace congress.”

Asked by journalist­s whether the prize was essentiall­y symbolic, Reiss-Andersen said “What will not have an impact is being passive.”

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