NPPW Nominations for the Nobel Peace Prize 2022
NOBEL LAUREATES, 7 Feb 2022
Fredrik S. Heffermehl | Nobel Peace Prize Watch – TRANSCEND Media Service
Shortlist Respecting Nobel’s Antiwar Intention Updated on 5 Feb 2022
Nobel Peace Prize Watch hereby presents its list of nominations for the 2022 Nobel Prize “for the champions of peace”. The overarching purpose of the prize, specified in the Nobel testament, is to liberate all nations from weapons, warriors and war, in his own words: to “build the community of nations”, “reduce or abolish” armaments and “promote peace congresses”.
The Norwegian Nobel Committee has a legal obligation to promote the peace vision specified in Alfred Nobel´s testament. However – ignoring the will and developing a general prize for “peace” – the committee insists on embezzling funds that Nobel intended for the protagonists of a demilitarized world order. The committee has continued ignoring the will even after it received solid documentation of Nobel´s intention in three books. Arms races increase the risk of new wars and high risks, but Nobel prescribed an alternative.
The following is NPPWs shortlist for 2022 of candidates whose actions support a demilitarized world and thus come within the peace order Nobel wished his prize to promote.
We appeal once again to the Norwegian awarders to see the need for the demilitarized global peace order Nobel wished to support and to define, publish and promote Nobel´s intention, not their own. They should take note of a widespread and increasing disdain, as formulated in a mail to us from an expert in international affairs: “making the prize a weapon for cheap geopolitical purposes has demeaned both the concepts of peace and human dignity.”
NPPW’s Recommended Shortlist for 2022:
The following candidates are eminently suited to serve and promote the core purpose of Nobel´s testament; global peace through “the community of nations” based on co-operation, international law, institutions and demilitarization of international relations:
– Madeleine Rees, England; Women´s International League for Peace and Freedom, Reaching Critical Will
Madeleine Rees, a British lawyer, has been the Secretary-General of the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) since 2010. Her long record as human rights defender includes service as head of the OHCHR in Bosnia and Herzegovina, where she courageously helped expose the involvement of UN peacekeepers in sex trafficking. Rees is leading the WILPF’s efforts to advance a future of human security and justice for all and building a true global movement for feminist peace. In 2014, Rees was awarded the OBE for her services to a.o. international peace and security.
WILPF, and Reaching Critical Will (RCW), its disarmament program created in 1999, provide state-of-the-art analysis and advocacy for disarmament, the reduction of global military spending and militarism. RCW seeks to achieve disarmament, challenge militarism, and confront violent masculinities and gender discrimination through research, policy analysis, advocacy, monitoring, and reporting on international forums such as the United Nations. RCW is committed to creating change by starting a new international discourse.
Nominators: Prof. (law) Hedda Giertsen, Oslo; Prof (law) Alfred de Zayas, Geneva
– Scilla Elworthy, England
Dr. Scilla Elworthy combines scholarly research with innovative methods of education and practical action for peace by dialogue and disarmament. An excellent and energetic author and speaker she provides visionary leadership for a different world. She has founded Oxford Research Group and several programs, including Peace Direct for Local Peace Builders. Her books include Pioneering the Possible: Awakened Leadership for a World that Works (2014), and A Business Plan for Peace (2017).
Nominator: Prof. (social science) Vinod Shankar Singh, India
– David Swanson, USA; World Beyond War
Antiwar activist, energetic author and organizer who has published several visionary books on abolition of war and how to organize global peace. His organization World Beyond War, WBW, founded in 2014, is a global effort to abolish the institution of war itself, take war off the table as a viable option. Just as with slavery, there is no such thing as a “good” or necessary war. Both institutions are never acceptable, no matter the circumstances. WBW seeks transition to a global security system supported by international law, diplomacy, collaboration, and human rights, and defending those things with nonviolent action rather than the threat of violence.
Nominator: NPPW, by Prof. (law) Kristian Andenaes, Oslo
– Binalaksi Nepram, India
Binalaksi Nepram began her activism against private arms and the use of force in the small communities of northeastern India where she was born. From the local and close perspective, Binalaksi has developed a struggle against the world’s weapons of mass destruction and for a culture of peace, and she advocates non-violence for both state and non-state actors. She has founded several organizations, among them the Manipuri Women’s Gun Survivor Network and the Control Arms Foundation of India. “Her achievements offer an inspiring model for activists in other parts of the world”, wrote IPB when it awarded her the Sean McBride prize in 2010.
Nominator: NPPW, by Prof. (law) Kristian Andenaes, Oslo
– Jan Oberg, Sweden
Oberg is a unique and keen protagonist of the UN Charter norm “peace by peaceful means” and the abolition of war. He uses empirical analysis as basis for criticism and constructive peace ideas and plans. His Transnational Foundation for Peace & Future Research, TFF, a network think tank based on Gandhian principles since 1986, has about 50 associates around the world. Programs include conflict mitigation, alternative security, nonviolence, a UN-based world order, peace research, education, advocacy, postwar reconciliation, and field work in all parts of Yugoslavia, Libya, Iran, China and others. TFF is also providing lectures and conflict skills training as well as innovative theories and practical solutions.
Nominator: NPPW, by Prof. (law) Kristian Andenaes, Oslo
– Klaus Schlichtmann, Germany/Japan
An international peace order must be one where the law reigns supreme, where the power of the law replaces the law of power. Klaus Schlichtmann has dedicated his life to this cause and has eminent historical insights with a thorough knowledge of the creation of the UN and works tirelessly to empower the Security Council and encourage UN member nations to renew their loyalty to the principles of world peace enshrined in the UN Charter.
SA9 seeks to have all nations follow the example of Japan and commit to refraining from aggression as prescribed in Art 9 of the Japanese constitution of 1946. The UN must realize the collective security idea of the Charter.
Nominator: Prof Winston Langley, Boston, USA.
– Alfred de Zayas, Switzerland
Professor Alfred de Zayas, after a long career as academic researcher, educator, and practitioner in the UN and several human rights organizations, has become a leading, most prolific expert on peace by global co-operation. In his latest book, «Building a Just World Order”, he shares insights of particular relevance to the Nobel prize. One is his efforts to promote «The Human Right to Peace», see Ch. 3, pp 61-87. In Ch. 2 his 25 Principles of International Order sum up UN Charter commitments and how the UN must become the cornerstone of a world under «The Rule of Justice» (not just Rule of Law). Through these principles, by the President of the UNGA called a “Magna Carta” for the 21st century, de Zayas promotes the essence of Nobel´s testament, “building the community of nations”.
Nominators: IHRAAM, Professors (law) Francis Boyle, USA, Harro von Senger, Germany
– Julian Assange, Australia; Chelsea Manning, USA; and Edward Snowden, USA
The world has had the great fortune that two of the most brilliant minds have combined the expertise on computer technology with a rare understanding of the human, social, legal, constitutional aspects and the dangers of the uncontrolled military exploitation of the new technology. For their service to humanity and their countries both have lost their freedom.
Julian Assange founded WikiLeaks to supply people all over the world with insight in secret documents they ought to have access to. His massive publication of secret US documents of military and diplomatic content led to a US conspiracy to take revenge and scare others from challenging the empire. His fate, where those guilty of war crimes wish him to be extradited to punish him illustrates the unacceptable power of the US military, even over the law enforcement in other countries.
Nominator: Prof. (law) Aslak Syse, Oslo; MEPs a.o.: Gregorová, Breyer, Pignedoli, Sonneborn
Chelsea Manning, serving in the US military, took courageous steps to expose a mass of secret material on war crimes and diplomatic schemes of the US.
Nominator: NPPW, by Prof. (law) Kristian Andenaes, Oslo
Edward Snowden, a dedicated patriot employed by the CIA, was aghast when he understood that the scope of the systems developed by the NSA amounted to a global police state. The US misused computer technology for a global intrusion in the lives of everyone, high and low, friend and foe, US citizen or foreigner, to make a “Permanent Record” (name of his book in 2019). The authorities acted in blatant violation of international law and the 4th Amendment of the US Constitution requiring justifiable suspicion and advance court approval of search in each case. Snowden felt that his oath of loyalty to the US constitution – not the government – required him to “to inform the public as to that which is done in their name and that which is done against them”. The US spy agencies commit an unprecedented, massive infringement of the rights of people and nations all over the world.
Nominator: NPPW, by Prof. (law) Kristian Andenaes, Oslo
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For inquiries or further information, please contact us:
Tomas Magnusson – gosta.tomas@gmail.com, tel +46 708 293197
Fredrik S. Heffermehl – fredpax@online.no, tel. +47 917 44 783
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Fredrik S. Heffermehl, cand. jur, LLM NYU, is a member of the TRANSCEND Network and ex-Vice President of the International Peace Bureau. He is the author of The Nobel Peace Prize, What Nobel Really Wanted (Praeger, 2010 – expanded versions in Chinese, Swedish, Finnish, Spanish and [2014] Russian). fredpax@online.no – http://www.nobelwill.org.
Tags: Nobel Peace Prize, Nobel Peace Prize Watch
This article originally appeared on Transcend Media Service (TMS) on 7 Feb 2022.
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