Schröder Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

Published: 24 August 2005 y., Wednesday

  German Chancellor Gerhard Schröder has been nominated for the Nobel peace prize, according to DPA news agency. Nobel literature laureate Günter Grass of Germany, who won the 1999 prize for literature, said Monday that he considered Schröder a candidate for the peace prize over his opposition to allowing Germany participate in the US-led attack on Iraq. A record 199 nominations including 166 individual nominees were reported to be under consideration for the 2005 award.

The peace prize, worth 10 million kroner ($1.5 million, 1.24 million euros), will be announced Oct. 14 in Oslo, Norway. Other names mentioned were former US Secretary of State Colin Powell, renowned musician Ravi Shankar of India, Chinese dissident Wei Jingsheng and previous nominees such as former Czech President Vaclav Havel, Israeli nuclear whistle-blower Mordechai Vanunu, and Bono of the Irish rock group U2. Parliamentarians, academics, former peace prize laureates and current and former members of the Norwegian Nobel committee have the right to nominate candidates. 

Šaltinis: dw-world.de
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

New Zealand death toll passes 100

Hopes fade of finding New Zealand in Christchurch, New Zealand as rescue teams enter their fourth day with over 200 people still missing. more »

Fake tiger escapes from zoo

An employee at a Japanese zoo dons a tiger costume in an exercise to prepare staff to deal with escaped animals. more »

Christchurch earthquake morning

State of emergency is declared in Christchurch New Zealand as the death toll stands at 75, but is expected to rise. more »

EIB delivers record lending for climate action in 2010 (82906)

In 2010, the European Investment Bank (EIB) increased financing for climate action projects to EUR 19 billion, representing an impressive 30% of its lending in the European Union. more »

European Commission meets Russian Government for executive-to-executive talks

President José Manuel Barroso and the European Commission will host the Russian Government led by Prime Minister Vladimir Putin on 24 February 2011. more »

Egypt welcomes tourists after revolt

The Egyptian Museum and the Pyramids reopen as the nation hopes to recoup some of the tourism lost during recent unrest. more »

Egypt celebrates

Egyptians celebrate late into the night marking the one week anniversary of the end of President Hosni Mubarak's rule. more »

Japan stops hunting whales

Japan says conservation groups have forced them to stop whaling expeditions for the rest of 2011. more »

Egypt: back democratic transition and freeze Egyptian leaders' assets, say MEPs

Reacting to the dizzying changes in Egypt, MEPs passed a resolution calling on the EU to rethink and improve its political and financial strategy to assist the country’s transition to democracy, including organising free elections. more »

Cyclone Carlos slams Australia

Category 1 tropical Cyclone Carlos batters the northern Australian city of Darwin, uprooting trees and inundating homes. more »