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

Thousands homeless after cyclone

Cyclone Aila slammed into south-western Bangladesh and eastern India, triggering tidal surges and flooding that forced half a million people from their homes. more »

N.Korea holds nuclear test

North Korea said Monday it successfully conducted an underground nuclear test, calling the move part of measures to bolster self-defence, although raising regional tensions. more »

Australia widens evacuation zone

The Australian town of Kempsey is one of five more communities told to leave on Saturday before flooding swamps the area. Thousands of hectares of New South Wales and Queensland have been left underwater after days of rain and cyclonic winds. more »

Africa Day: The European Commission reaffirms its commitment to strengthen the EU-Africa Partnership in order to address common challenges

Olli Rehn, the acting European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid, says "The peoples of Africa and of Europe share the same hopes, the same values and the same interests. more »

U.S. bomb plot arrests

U.S. authorities charged four men with plotting to bomb a synagogue and a Jewish community centre in New York and to shoot down military planes using surface-to-air missiles. more »

China's police tech kit

China invited over 350 companies to showcase the most advanced police equipment on Wednesday, drawing thousands to see the latest industry technology. more »

Customs seize record ivory haul

The ivory was seized by customs officials after being smuggled from Tanzania to the Philippines. more »

Deadly Indonesia plane crash

A military plane crashed in Indonesia's East Java, leaving at least 97 people dead, according to the Indonesian air force. more »

Britain's Speaker to step down

MPs in Britain had been calling for Michael Martin's resignation for days. On Tuesday he became the first House of Commons speaker in 314 years to be forced from office. more »

World Bank to Help Bangladesh Cut Urban Air Pollution

The World Bank today approved a US$62.20 million IDA credit to Bangladesh, designed to improve urban air quality through measures that will cut emissions in key polluting sectors such as transport and brick making. more »