Kenyan Woman Wins Nobel Peace Prize

NATO AIR

Senior Member
Jun 25, 2004
4,275
285
48
USS Abraham Lincoln
:banana: another eloquent, free and brave woman has won the nobel peace prize. we should salute her for her achievements and the works she has embarked on for the future. in her field especially, recognizing the truth that the great majority of africa's nightmarish conflicts are over resources is a vital aspect of her contribution to africa and its future. the most troubled continent in the world today got some good news for once.


http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/6204306/

Environmentalist awarded Nobel Peace Prize
Kenyan founded movement to protect African forests

Celebrating her Nobel Peace Prize, Wangari Maathai on Friday reached out to villagers in Ihururu, Kenya, where she helped distribute farm aid while talking about the importance of preserving forests.
MSNBC News Services

Updated: 12:39 p.m. ET Oct. 8, 2004OSLO, Norway - Kenyan environmental activist Wangari Maathai won the Nobel Peace Prize on Friday for her work as leader of the Green Belt Movement, which has sought to empower women, improve the environment and fight corruption in Africa for almost 30 years.

“Many of the wars in Africa are fought over natural resources,” she told The Associated Press. “Ensuring they are not destroyed is a way of ensuring there is no conflict.”

In her first speech after winning the award, she spoke in her native Kikuyu language to an audience of 200 people, mostly poor women who had gathered to collect government food aid.

“Don’t farm in forests ... because we will lose our forests,” she said. “We have been given the responsibility of caring for future generations, and the younger ones, so that they may have water.”

The crowd clapped politely when she told them she had won another international award, which most of them has never heard of. But they laughed loudly when told the prize brought with it more money than she could count.

Earlier Friday, Maathai planted a tree to celebrate and vowed to use the money to strengthen her campaign to save Africa’s forests.

“I have never seen so much money in my life!” she told Reuters in an interview in her home town of Nyeri, which nestles in the shadow of Mount Kenya, Africa’s second highest peak.

“I was shaking and crying and I looked at the mountain -- this mountain that has inspired me for many years. I particularly liked the fact that the news reached me here in Nyeri, at home in front of Mount Kenya,” she said.

Parts of Mount Kenya have been deforested and acres of marijuana have been found growing in the forests — a sign of desperation by some farmers hit by low world prices for coffee.

Maathai, 64, is believed to have been the first woman in East and Central Africa to earn a doctorate.

“Some of it (the money) will definitely go towards the environmental programs," she added. "I have to make a budget and think about the things I will do — just like rich people (do)!”

Maathai, Kenya’s deputy environment minister, is the first African woman to win the prize, first awarded in 1901. She gained recent acclaim for a campaign planting 30 million trees to stave off deforestation.

“We believe that Maathai is a strong voice speaking for the best forces in Africa to promote peace and good living conditions on that continent,” the Nobel committee said in its citation.

Kenyan President Mwai Kibaki said that “as a government we are proud to have her as an assistant minister."

“As Kenyans," he added, "we must rededicate ourselves to conserve the environment as a gesture of appreciation of the prestigious award to one of our own.”

First peace prize for environment
With a record 194 nominations, the committee had a broad field to choose from, and speculation had focused on other candidates. Many observers had wondered if the committee would try to send a message about Iraq, as it did in 2002, when members said the choice of former U.S. President Jimmy Carter should be seen as criticism of the Bush administration’s move to topple Saddam Hussein.

The choice of Maathai was a clear answer that it would eschew politics this time around.

It was the first time the prize recognized work to preserve the environment. During the 2001 centennial anniversary of the prize, the committee said it wanted to widen the scope of the award, including honoring those who worked to improve the environment, as well as contributed to advancing peace worldwide.

“This is the first time environment sets the agenda for the Nobel Peace Prize, and we have added a new dimension to peace. We want to work for a better life environment in Africa,” said committee chairman Ole Danbolt Mjoes.

Maathai, 64, is believed to have been the first woman in East and Central Africa to earn a doctorate. She got a degree in biological sciences from Mount St. Scholastica College in Atchison, Kan., in 1964.

Previous winners from Africa include U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who shared the prize with the United Nations in 2001, and Nelson Mandela and F.W. de Klerk, South Africa, in 1993.

Environment and war
“The environment is very important in the aspects of peace because when we destroy our resources and our resources become scarce, we fight over that,” Maathai told Norwegian state television, fighting back tears. “I am working to make sure we don’t only protect the environment, we also improve governance.”

Maathai has also been praised for standing up to Kenya’s former government, led by President Daniel arap Moi for 24 years until he stepped down after elections in 2002.

The award, which includes $1.3 million, is always presented on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the death of its founder, Swedish industrialist Alfred Nobel. The peace prize is awarded in Oslo, and the other Nobel prizes are presented in the Swedish capital, Stockholm.

“Peace on earth depends on our ability to secure our living environment,” Maathai’s citation said. “Maathai stands at the front of the fight to promote ecologically viable social, economic and cultural development in Kenya and in Africa.”

Maathai founded the Green Belt Movement in 1977 while a member of the National Council of Women of Kenya. She abandoned a promising academic career as a biology professor to pursue her environment projects.

Should weapons have been focus?
Morten Hoeglund, a member of Norway’s Progress Party, criticized the award to Maathai, saying there were more pressing issues like weapons of mass destruction the Nobel Committee should focus on.

“Today we have problems with nuclear arms and technology gone astray. The Nobel Committee should spend more resources on these matters instead,” he said.

Indeed, oddsmakers and speculation had pointed to Mohamed ElBaradei and the International Atomic Energy Agency as likely winners.

Last year’s winner, Shirin Ebadi of Iran was similarly a dark horse.

This year’s award announcements began Monday with the Nobel Prize in physiology or medicine going to Americans Richard Axel and Linda Buck for their work on the sense of smell. On Tuesday, Americans David Gross, H. David Politzer and Frank Wilczek won the physics prize for their explanation of the force that binds particles inside the atomic nucleus.

The chemistry prize was awarded Wednesday to Israelis Aaron Ciechanover and Avram Hershko and American Irwin Rose for their work in discovering a process that lets cells destroy unwanted proteins. On Thursday, Austrian feminist writer Elfriede Jelinek won the Nobel Prize in literature on Thursday.

The Bank of Sweden Prize in Economic Sciences in Memory of Alfred Nobel will be announced Oct. 11.
 
While im sure protecting the environment is a great thing and this woman is probably a good woman, on what basis does protecting the environment deserve the nobel peace prize? her accomplishments have nothing to do with providing peace in the world.

But then, neither did Jimmy Carter's.
 
Avatar4321 said:
While im sure protecting the environment is a great thing and this woman is probably a good woman, on what basis does protecting the environment deserve the nobel peace prize? her accomplishments have nothing to do with providing peace in the world.

But then, neither did Jimmy Carter's.

“The environment is very important in the aspects of peace because when we destroy our resources and our resources become scarce, we fight over that,” Maathai told Norwegian state television, fighting back tears. “I am working to make sure we don’t only protect the environment, we also improve governance.”

in Africa, it is quite true that the scarcity of resources is and will continue to be a source of conflict. the fact that she has fought to secure those resources and prevent them from being wiped out is perhaps what the nobel folks were thinking.
 
http://www.abc.net.au/news/newsitems/200410/s1216687.htm

Nobel peace laureate claims HIV deliberately created


Kenyan ecologist Wangari Maathai, the first African woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize, today reiterated her claim that the AIDS virus was a deliberately created biological agent.

"Some say that AIDS came from the monkeys, and I doubt that because we have been living with monkeys (since) time immemorial, others say it was a curse from God, but I say it cannot be that.

"Us black people are dying more than any other people in this planet," Ms Maathai told a press conference in Nairobi a day after winning the prize for her work in human rights and reversing deforestation across Africa.

"It's true that there are some people who create agents to wipe out other people. If there were no such people, we could have not have invaded Iraq," she said.

"We invaded Iraq because we believed that Saddam Hussein had made, or was in the process of creating agents of biological warfare," said Ms Maathai.

"In fact it (the HIV virus) is created by a scientist for biological warfare," she added.

"Why has there been so much secrecy about AIDS? When you ask where did the virus come from, it raises a lot of flags. That makes me suspicious," Ms Maathai said.

Africa accounts for 25 million out of the estimated 38 million across the world infected with HIV, and the vast majority of infected Africans are women, according to UNAIDS estimates.

The United States on Friday congratulated Ms Maathai on winning the Nobel Peace Prize, but tempered its praise over her claims about AIDS.

"She said (HIV/AIDS) was invented as a bio-weapon in some laboratory in the West," a senior State Department official said.

"We don't agree with that."

The official pointed to a report of those comments published in August in Kenya's daily Standard newspaper, in which Ms Maathai was quoted as saying that HIV/AIDS was created by scientists for the purpose of mass extermination.

--AFP


At any rate increasing the agricultural productivity of Africa would be much preferable to most Africans than trying to save the trees. You can't eat wood.
 
You really think we are going to cause war over trees? I dont. its a ridiculous idea.

as for Aids, maybe it was a biological agent. But what makes her think it was created in the west? Soviets quite a weapons program too. Perhaps they thought that they could inject it with a few of their sympathetic comerades and encourage them to promote sexual immorality without disclosing that they were infected with an agent. Perhaps it was a way to use America's freedom against it. Who knows at this point but its kinda silly to think it was made for the express purpose of eliminating the people in africa as this woman seems to imply. If you dont want aids to spread stop 1)having sex outside marriage 2)Doing drugs 3)careless blood transfusions. Its not terribly difficult.
 
Avatar4321 said:
You really think we are going to cause war over trees? I dont. its a ridiculous idea.

not the USA, but other African countries between themselves. water hasn't become too scarce yet, just wait....
 
Hell, at least they aint nominating someone like yasser arafat. who the hell would nominate a terrorist for the nobel peace prize. i think that this is a step in the right direction from good ol'e jimmy and that asswipe yasser
 
I commend her for her accomplishments.

But I question how she qualified for a Nobel Peace Prize after she states that the AIDS virus was created by white people to wipe out blacks. This statement doesn't sound peaceful to me.

Ebola is from Africa also, you know the one that makes you bleed out, so why is it hard to accept that the AIDS virus is from there also.
 
Trigg said:
I commend her for her accomplishments.

But I question how she qualified for a Nobel Peace Prize after she states that the AIDS virus was created by white people to wipe out blacks. This statement doesn't sound peaceful to me.

Ebola is from Africa also, you know the one that makes you bleed out, so why is it hard to accept that the AIDS virus is from there also.


Because half of the top ten biological warfare plants are located in Africa.

To understand the reasoning behind her theory, you must understand how the virus works in its defensive posture.

When the HIV virus gets attacked by a vaccine, many of them will die; however, within months, the HIV virus quickly changes its genetic code and blocks out the vaccine; no different than a General retreats from his position, reposition his troops, then mount a new offensive.

In layman's terms; this virus can literally read and react. This is the first known virus to know how to think for itself. The question is who "taught" it how to think?

Any suggestions?
 
well folks like pat robertson and bob novak would tell you god designed it to punish people... though how and why a just God would inflict tremendous pain on innocent children in the form of a virus is beyond my limited human mind.

all i know about the HIV/AIDS virus is its a killer... i've watched it take people in their prime, seen the suffering it causes in people and the utter destruction it inflicts on individuals. when you see a six year old tied up to countless IV's and machines crying from the pain of the medicine and the virus's effects, you stop caring where the virus came from or who created it/came into existence and just worry about how to stop it.
 

Forum List

Back
Top