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Activists Win Right Livelihood Awards
A Swedish award widely described as the "alternative Nobel prize" has gone to activists from the Democratic Republic of Congo, Australia and New Zealand.
From left: Rene Ngongo, of Greenpeace; Catherine Hamlin, an Australian doctor who lives in Ethiopia; New Zealander Alyn Ware; and Canadian David Suzuki. The awards ceremony will take place in the Swedish parliament in December. Rene Ngongo, of
Greenpeace, was one of the recipients of the annual "Right Livelihood
Award" for his efforts to protect the Congolese rain forest.
Catherine Hamlin, an Australian doctor who lives in Ethiopia, was honoured for her medical research benefiting women.
New Zealander Alyn Ware was recognised for efforts on nuclear disarmament.
Each will also receive 50,000 euros ($74,000) from the Right Livelihood Award Foundation.
The foundation was set up by Swedish-German philanthropist Jakob von Uexkull in 1980 "to honour and support those offering practical and exemplary answers to the most urgent challenges facing us today".
An honorary award, which does not include any prize money, was given to the Canadian environmentalist and television presenter David Suzuki for raising awareness of climate change.
"Despite the scientific warnings about the imminent threat and disastrous impacts of climate change and despite our knowledge about solutions, the global response to this crisis is still painfully slow and largely inadequate," the Right Livelihood Award Jury said.
"At the same time, the threat from nuclear weapons has by no means diminished, and the treatable diseases of poverty shame our common humanity," it added.
"The 2009 Right Livelihood Award Recipients demonstrate concretely what has to be done in order to tackle climate change, rid the world of nuclear weapons, and provide crucial medical treatment to the poor and marginalised."



3 Comments so far
Show AllCongratulations to all these brave and visionary individuals for their very important work. Shame on Obama and the US politicians for failing to do what is necessary and what he promised to do in his election campaign!!!
I am very proud of my friend Alyn Ware. Alyn is from Aotearoa/New Zealand, where as a young man he traveled around the country in a van promoting the idea of peace education. Alyn was the lead organizer of the global effort to push the World Court to hear the question of whether international law prohibits the threat or use of nuclear weapons. (In 1996, the court gave its answer: Yes, but only "generally"; however, the legal obligation to eliminate this class of weapons from the arsenals of all nations is definitive.) That was only one of this brilliant activist's many accomplishments. He's now organizing parliamentarians around the world in support of disarmament and non-proliferation. You can read more about him at http://www.rightlivelihood.org/ware.html.
Since President Obama was named this year's Nobel Peace Laureate, there has been some fruitful debate about the degree to which the award was deserved or strategically useful. It's worth noting that the president's support for nuclear disarmament—not just words, but also a very interesting Security Council resolution—was one of the main reasons he got the nod from Oslo. At any rate, there should be no doubt at all that Alyn Ware deserves recognition as one of the world's great peacemakers. Good on you, mate!
That's great and I congratulate Ngongo, Hamlin and Ware. I do have a problem with Suzuki however. If everyone was as ecologically aware as Suzuki and had six kids anyway, the world would still have an environmental problem.