<http://www.democracynow.org/2012/12/10/> 
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/12/10/
 
We broadcast from Oslo, Norway, just outside Oslo City Hall, as the European 
Union receives the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize. Norwegian peace organizations and 
opponents of the European Union held a torch-lit march Sunday to protest the 
decision. Three Nobel Peace Prize laureates — Archbishop Desmond Tutu, Mairead 
Maguire of Northern Ireland and Adolfo Pérez Esquivel from Argentina — sent an 
unprecedented letter to the Nobel Committee opposing the award, saying the 
27-nation bloc contradicts Alfred Nobel’s vision of a demilitarized global 
peace order. We begin the show going inside the Nobel Peace Prize awards 
ceremony. "We are not gathered here today in the belief that the European Union 
is perfect," says Thorbjørn Jagland, chairperson of the Norwegian Nobel 
Committee. "We are gathered in the belief that here in Europe we must solve our 
problems together." The committee said it chose to honor the European Union 
because of its contributions to decades of stability and democracy after World 
War II.
 
 
http://www.democracynow.org/2012/12/10/norwegian_peace_activist_top_role_in
 

AMY GOODMAN: That’s the Norwegian singer Kari Svendsen singing at Sunday’s 
protest in Oslo, the well-known antiwar song, "Last Night I Had the Strangest 
Dream." This is Democracy Now!, democracynow.org, The War and Peace Report. 
Above me, a helicopter is hovering overhead. We’re just at the port in Oslo, 
Norway. I am standing just in front of Oslo City Hall, where the 2012 Nobel 
Peace Prize ceremony has just wrapped up. People are now coming out. Not far 
from here is the Museum of Resistance, the Norwegians who resisted the Nazis in 
World War II.

Well, on Sunday, hundreds of Norwegians held a torch-lit march in Oslo to 
criticize the selection of the European Union for the Nobel Peace Prize. Just 
before the march, I sat down with Hedda Langemyr, the director of the Norwegian 
Peace Council.

HEDDA LANGEMYR: I was very surprised. And I was surprised because not long ago 
we also had a strong negative reaction to the prize in 2009, when Obama 
received it. Last year, when it was given to Tawakkul Karman and Gbowee and 
Sirleaf Johnson, we, maybe naively, hoped that the Nobel Committee was on 
better thoughts and had better intentions for the prize. However, it was a big 
disappointment for us, because we believe that this year’s prize contradicts 
Nobel’s will and the intentions for the prize.

AMY GOODMAN: What is Alfred Nobel’s will? What does it say?

HEDDA LANGEMYR: It says that the award should be given to person that has done 
most or best for disarmament, for fraternity and for the organization of peace 
congresses of the last year. If you look at the EU, EU is of course no single 
actor. It’s not a person. They haven’t done that much for peace the last year, 
and they are actively facilitating armament, processes which contradict with 
the disarmament component in Nobel’s will.

AMY GOODMAN: How are they facilitating armament?

HEDDA LANGEMYR: Well, the member states of the EU have had an enormous increase 
in the weapon industry. This goes for Turkey.  It goes particularly for 
Germany. The EU member countries also represent about one-third of the global 
arms export in the world. And there are nuclear weapons placed in five 
different EU countries. What the EU as an institution does to facilitate this 
is through something called the ICT Directive that was introduced this year. So 
the year they’re receiving the Nobel Peace Prize, they are launching a 
directive that facilitates weapon industry and export through making the 
industry a part of the internal market, which means that it’s much easier for 
the EU member countries to avoid their national legislators on this. So, it’s 
liberalizing the conditions for weapon production and export.

AMY GOODMAN: And how clearly are you heard in Norway when you speak out? 
Explain how the Nobel Peace Prize is decided.

HEDDA LANGEMYR: The Nobel Committee consists of five members appointed by 
Parliament, and in a very closed and confidential process with not many voices 
or members included. What we do is comment on this on an annual basis, trying 
to invite the Nobel Committee to a debate on how to come back to the foundation 
this prize was built on from the very beginning, and which the Nobel Committee 
is moving further and further away from. In that sense, we have fairly easy 
access to media. We do a lot of public debate work, and we do a lot of pure 
informational work, because a lot of the people in Norway don’t necessarily 
know so much about Nobel’s will or know so much about the Nobel Committee or 
know so much about the criteria for the prize. So one of our main tasks also in 
this period of time is to inform about this, to awake public consciousness and 
to awake public mobilization.

AMY GOODMAN: Why did you oppose President Obama receiving the Nobel Peace Prize 
in 2009? And do you feel the same way about him today, in 2012?

HEDDA LANGEMYR: Well, opposing in 2009 was very easy.  At that time, he was a 
state leader, commander-in-chief, waging two wars, in Afghanistan and Iraq, 
increasing military troops in Afghanistan, waging two wars that we were 
principally against and that were not going well at all. And in that sense, 
that was a very clear paradox. You’re basically giving the peace prize to a 
warrior. And during his speech, when he came to Norway and held his peace prize 
speech on December 10th, he actually used the word "war" more often than he 
used the word "peace," which is also kind of illustrating what kind of  real 
political atmosphere he’s a part of and  not only different from, but 
incompatible with the intentions of the prize and guidelines for the prize.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, you’ve talked about the European Union militarizing the 
world. On the issue of the austerity programs that have been imposed on 
southern European countries, can you talk about your concerns there?

HEDDA LANGEMYR: Well, when it comes to the packages to Greece, for instance, 
the EU is dictating major cuts in certain parts of their national budget, but 
at the same time they’re delivering a premise. That is, that Greece is not to 
reduce their weapon import, which means that, relatively, EU is dictating an 
armament process in Greece in a situation where they are severely suffering and 
there are extremely many different obstacles and dilemmas to be handled. And in 
that sense, the weapon import, it’s not reflecting security, or even political 
need.  It’s a waste of money, and leading to a rearmament process in Greece 
that nobody is really served with. And this is just one of many examples of how 
the EU is facilitating the weapon flow, arms economy and profit.

AMY GOODMAN: Finally, can you tell us about the building that your window 
overlooks?

HEDDA LANGEMYR: Yes. This is the governmental building that was attacked on 
July 22nd, 2011, where eight people were killed by Anders Behring Breivik, the 
terrorist that later attacked and killed 69 young Labor Party youth in the 
island called Utøya. I also think that the physical closeness of those acts of 
extremism and those acts of brutal violence also is a constant reminder for us 
working here in the Peace House of what kind of forces we are up against and 
have to continue working against also in the time to come.

AMY GOODMAN: That’s Hedda Langemyr, the director of the Norwegian Peace 
Council, speaking yesterday just before the peace protest. She also attended 
the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize ceremony today, right behind me at Oslo City Hall. 
The ceremony has just ended. About 20 heads of state in Europe and heads of 
government are now conducting a working lunch before the big banquet at the 
Grand Hotel. 

* * *

http://www.thenation.com/article/171272/nobel-laureates-salute-bradley-manning

Nobel Laureates Salute Bradley Manning 
 
 <http://www.thenation.com/authors/archbishop-desmond-tutu> Archbishop Desmond 
Tutu,  <http://www.thenation.com/authors/mairead-maguire> Mairead Maguire and  
<http://www.thenation.com/authors/adolfo-perez-esquivel> Adolfo Pérez Esquivel
The Nation: This article appeared in  
<http://www.thenation.com/issue/december-3-2012> the December 3, 2012 edition 
 
As people who have worked for decades against the increased militarization of 
societies and for international cooperation to end war, we are deeply dismayed 
by the treatment of Pfc. Bradley Manning.
 
We have dedicated our lives to working for peace because we have seen the many 
faces of armed conflict and violence, and we understand that no matter the 
cause of war, civilians always bear the brunt of the cost. With today’s 
advanced military technology and the continued ability of business and 
political elites to filter what information is made public, there exists a 
great barrier to many citizens being fully aware of the realities and 
consequences of conflicts in which their country is engaged.
Responsible governance requires fully informed citizens who can question their 
leadership. For those citizens worldwide who do not have direct, intimate 
knowledge of war, yet are still affected by rising international tensions and 
failing economies, the WikiLeaks releases attributed to Manning have provided 
unparalleled access to important facts. 

Revealing covert crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan, this window into the realities 
of modern international relations has changed the world for the better. While 
some of these documents may demonstrate how much work lies ahead in terms of 
securing international peace and justice, they also highlight the potential of 
the Internet as a forum for citizens to participate more directly in civic 
discussion and creative government accountability projects. 

Questioning authority, as a soldier, is not easy. But it can at times be 
honorable. The words attributed to Manning reveal that he went through a 
profound moral struggle between the time he enlisted and when he became a 
whistleblower. Through his experience in Iraq, he became disturbed by top-level 
policy that undervalued human life and caused the suffering of innocent 
civilians and soldiers. Like other courageous whistleblowers, he was driven 
foremost by a desire to reveal the truth.

Private Manning said in chat logs that he hoped the releases would bring 
“discussion, debates and reforms” and condemned the ways the “first world 
exploits the third.” Much of the world regards him as a hero for these efforts 
toward peace and transparency, and he has been nominated for the Nobel Peace 
Prize as a result. However, much as when high-ranking officials in the United 
States and Britain misled the public in 2003 by saying there was an imminent 
need to invade Iraq to stop it from using weapons of mass destruction, the 
world’s most powerful elites have again insulted international opinion and the 
intelligence of many citizens by withholding facts regarding Manning and 
WikiLeaks.

The military prosecution has not presented evidence that Private Manning 
injured anyone by releasing secret documents, and it has asserted in court that 
the charge of “aiding the enemy through indirect means” does not require it to 
do so. Nor has the prosecution denied that his motivations were conscientious; 
it has simply argued they are irrelevant. In ignoring this context and 
recommending a much more severe punishment for Bradley Manning than is given to 
US soldiers guilty of murdering civilians, military leadership is sending a 
chilling warning to other soldiers who might feel compelled by conscience to 
reveal misdeeds. It is our belief that leaders who use fear to govern, rather 
than sharing wisdom born from facts, cannot be just.

We Nobel Peace Prize laureates condemn the persecution Bradley Manning has 
suffered, including imprisonment in conditions declared “cruel, inhuman and 
degrading” by the United Nations, and call upon Americans to stand up in 
support of this whistleblower who defended their democratic rights. In the 
conflict in Iraq alone, more than 110,000 people have died since 2003, millions 
have been displaced and nearly 4,500 American soldiers have been killed. If 
someone needs to be held accountable for endangering Americans and civilians, 
let’s first take the time to examine the evidence regarding high-level crimes 
already committed, and what lessons can be learned. If Bradley Manning released 
the documents, as the prosecution contends, we should express to him our 
gratitude for his efforts toward accountability in government, informed 
democracy and peace.

To learn more about Bradley Manning’s case or to get involved, visit the 
Bradley Manning Support Network  <http://www.bradleymanning.org/> website.

In our September 17 issue, JoAnn Wypijewski examined the situation of the 
founder of Wikileaks, in “ 
<http://www.thenation.com/article/169632/julian-assange-justice-foreclosed> For 
Julian Assange: Justice Foreclosed.”

 

  _____  

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