OSLO (Reuters) – Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki, alleged WikiLeaks whistleblower Bradley Manning, and former U.S. President Bill Clinton may be among the hundreds of nominees for the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, rights activists say.
The list of nominees, which is now officially closed for this year, is secret and Nobel officials would not comment on its contents. But experts have begun speculating about who is on the list and some people eligible to nominate candidates have publicised their suggestions. The committee added the final names for consideration on Friday.
“It could well be that they look to Tunisia,” veteran Nobel-watcher Jan Egeland, European director of Human Rights Watch, said on Monday after the five-member Norwegian Nobel Committee said it was considering 231 names. “It’s the only shining success story of the Arab Spring so far.”
Marzouki, a human rights activist who became Tunisian president in December, “would symbolise the whole peaceful transition from authoritarian repression to democracy,” said Egeland.
Other known candidates are former German Chancellor Helmut Kohl, the architect of Germany’s post-war reunification, as well as the European Union itself.
The wave of protests that came to be known as the Arab Spring began in Tunisia and swept across Egypt, Libya, Yemen and most recently Syria, where President Bashar al-Assad has cracked down ferociously on his opponents.
The protests got a nod from the Nobel committee in 2011, when Yemeni protest leader Tawakkol Karman shared the prize with Liberian President Ellen Johnsen Sirleaf and Liberian peace activist Leymah Gbowee.
Egeland said the Arab freedom drive remained the world’s most acute conflict and was far from exhausted as a Nobel theme. Earlier this month, Marzouki called on Syria’s Assad to give up power and embrace “a democratic transition”.
Among the 231 nominees are 43 organisations, said Geir Lundestad, executive secretary to the Norwegian Nobel Committee.
“Many of them (nominees) have been nominated for years in a row, but there are also some newcomers,” he told Reuters. Last year’s nomination list, the largest ever, consisted of 241 people and organisations.
The winner is announced in October every year, and receives the prize at a ceremony on Dec 10.
Kristian Berg Harpviken, director of the Peace Research Institute of Oslo and one of the individuals eligible to nominate candidates, has released a short list of those names he had submitted. It is headed by Gene Sharp, a U.S. writer and philosopher who has long advocated non-violent action for social justice.
Sharp is a known 2012 nominee, as is Harpviken’s second choice: the Russian human rights organisation Memorial and its co-founder, Svetlana Gannushkina.
Also nominated is Denis Mukwege, a gynaecologist who has treated thousands of women raped by militia fighters in the Democratic Republic of Congo.