DAKAR, (Reuters) – A row has broken out over plans by UNESCO to award a prize for life sciences named after the leader of the tiny African nation of Equatorial Guinea, whose government is widely accused of corruption and rights abuses.
A coalition of rights and civil society groups said the agency was allowing Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo to launder his international reputation by funding the $3 million prize instead of using the cash to improve the living standards of his people.
“The grim irony of awarding a prize recognizing ‘scientific achievements that improve the quality of human life’, while naming it for a president whose 30-year rule has been marked by the brutal poverty and fear of his people and a global reputation for governmental corruption, would bring shame on UNESCO,” 30 groups said in a statement sent to UNESCO.