Otago Daily Times

Thunberg strong contender for prize

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OSLO: This year’s Nobel Peace Prize could go to green campaigner Greta Thunberg and the Fridays for Future movement to highlight the link between environmen­tal damage and the threat to peace and security, experts say.

The winner of the prize, 9 million Swedish krona ($NZ1.52 million), arguably the world’s top accolade, will be announced in Oslo on October 9 from a field of 318 candidates. The prize can be split up to three ways.

The Swedish 17yearold was nominated by three Norwegian lawmakers and two Swedish parliament­arians and if she wins, she would receive it at the same age as Pakistan’s Malala Yousafzai, the youngest Nobel laureate thus far.

Asle Sveen, a historian and author of several books about the prize, said Thunberg would be a strong candidate for this year’s award, her second nomination in as many years, with the United States West Coast wildfires and rising temperatur­es in the Arctic ‘`leaving people in no doubt’’ about global warming.

‘‘Not a single person has done more to get the world to focus on climate change than her,’’ Sveen told Reuters.

The committee has given the prize to environmen­talists before, starting with Kenya’s Wangari Maathai in 2004 for her campaign to plant 30 million trees across Africa, and in 2007 to Al Gore and the Intergover­nmental Panel on Climate Change.

In the era of the Covid19 crisis, the committee could also choose to highlight the threat of pandemics to peace and security, Stockholm Internatio­nal Peace Research Institute director Dan Smith said.

‘‘There is a relationsh­ip between environmen­tal damage and our increasing problem with pandemics and I wonder whether the Nobel Peace Prize committee might want to highlight that,’’ he told Reuters.

If the committee wanted to highlight this trend, he said, ‘‘there is obviously the temptation of Greta Thunberg’’.

The Fridays for Future movement started in 2018 when Thunberg began a school strike in Sweden to push for action on climate. It has since become a global protest.

Many were sceptical when Greta, as she is often referred to, became the bookmaker’s favourite to win last year’s Nobel Peace Prize, especially with regards to her age, but her second nomination could strengthen her chances.

‘‘Greta is renominate­d, which was the case for Malala. I said Malala was young when she was nominated the first time and I said Greta was young the first time she was nominated,'' Sveen said.

Yousafzai won in 2014.

Other known candidates include the ‘‘people of Hong Kong’’, Nato, Julian Assange,

Chelsea Manning and Edward Snowden and jailed Saudi activist Loujain alHathloul.

Other possible choices are Reporters Without Borders, Angela Merkel and the World Health Organisati­on, experts said, though it is unclear whether they are nominated.

Nomination­s are secret for 50 years but those who nominate can choose to publicise their choices. Thousands of people are eligible to nominate, including members of parliament­s and government­s, university professors and past laureates.

It is not known whether Donald Trump is nominated for this year’s prize, though he is up for next year’s award after a Norwegian politician named the US President for helping broker a deal between Israel and the United Arab Emirates.

He was unlikely to win, Sveen and Smith agreed, not least for his dismantlin­g of the internatio­nal treaties to limit the proliferat­ion of nuclear weapons, a cause dear to Nobel committees.

‘‘He is divisive and seems to not take a clear stance against the violence the right wing perpetrate­s in the US,’’ Smith said.

‘‘And that is just the first list.’’ — Reuters

MELBOURNE: Victoria’s hotel quarantine programme, responsibl­e for the state’s second Covid19 wave, has leapt back into the spotlight amid explosive new inquiry evidence.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews faces fresh questions over claims from the state’s former top cop that his office ‘‘set up’’ the deal to use private security guards in its botched hotel quarantine scheme.

Text correspond­ence between thenChief Commission­er Graham Ashton and Australian Federal Police Commission­er Reece Kershaw was shown at

 ?? PHOTO: REUTERS ?? Fighting for the future . . . Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg holds a poster reading ‘‘School strike for Climate’’ as she protests in front of the Swedish Parliament Riksdagen, in Stockholm, Sweden, on September 5.
PHOTO: REUTERS Fighting for the future . . . Swedish climate activist Greta Thunberg holds a poster reading ‘‘School strike for Climate’’ as she protests in front of the Swedish Parliament Riksdagen, in Stockholm, Sweden, on September 5.

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