Anger over ‘politicised’ Nobel Peace award

The Nobel Prize Committee has sparked controversy by selecting former Finnish 
president Martti Oiva Kalevi Ahtisaari as this year’s Peace Prize winner. He is 
best known as the author of the proposal to settle the conflict in Serbia’s 
breakaway Kosovo region. 

The committee cited Ahtisaari’s “important efforts, on several continents and 
over more than three decades, to resolve international conflicts.” 

He was one of 197 nominees, but his choice has elicited a mixed reaction in 
Russia, with suspicions voiced that the decision was “politicised.”

Ahtisaari was a teacher before entering the foreign service. His first posting 
was as Finnish ambassador to Tanzania in 1973, when he was 36. 

He was instrumental in the Namibian independence movement as a UN special envoy 
in the 1980s and he went on to become president of his country from 1994 to 
2000. 

In 2005, he took part in the peace process in Aceh, Indonesia, helping to bring 
an end to a three-decade conflict there. Ahtisaari also had a hand in peace 
efforts in Northern Ireland and the horn of Africa. 

But it is his role in Kosovo which has thrust him into the spotlight most 
recently. Kosovo, which has a large Albanian population, had been under the 
administration of KFOR, a NATO-led peacekeeping force, since the NATO military 
operation in 1999. It had forced Serbian president Slobodan Milosevic to agree 
to a foreign military presence there in light of accusations of genocide of the 
Albanians. 

The region remained troubled and Ahtisaari was appointed UN special envoy in 
November 2005 to search for a settlement. His complex proposal was widely 
interpreted as giving statehood status to the region, as it allowed it its own 
national symbols, security force and the right to apply for membership of 
international organisations. 

While the plan received wide support from Western powers, Serbia and Russia 
were vehemently opposed to it. Ultimately, the European Union, Russia and the 
United States agreed to find a new format for negotiations, and Ahtisaari 
declared his mission over. Kosovo unilaterally declared its independence in 
February of this year.

The Nobel Prize has triggered criticism in Russia. Chairman of the Federation 
Council Foreign Affairs Committee, Mikhail Margelov, said: “If it weren’t for 
the UN mission in Kosovo, which, no matter what you say, Ahtisaari did not 
carry out, the awarding of the prize would not cause any fallout. We can only 
think that, for the Nobel Committee, the impressive list of the accomplishments 
of the former president of Finland outweighed that misfortune, even though that 
misfortune is nothing less than the division of Serbia.”

Konstantin Kosachev, chairman of the Russian State Duma Foreign Affairs 
Committee, suggested that the award “is an attempt to give the so-called 
Ahtisaari plan for Kosovo, which did not solve the problem, a retrospective 
certification of quality.”

A number of other Russian politicians commented in a similar vein. First deputy 
chairman of the same committee called Ahtisaari’s award justification for the 
recognition of Kosovo, which had “opened Pandora’s box”  for unrecognised 
republics.

Alexander Torshin, deputy speaker of the Federation Council, shared Slutsky’s 
point of view, but gave it a different interpretation. “The Nobel Committee’s 
decision on Ahtisaari is the perfect proof that Russia’s recognition of the 
independence of South Ossetia and Abkhazia is justified. Mr Ahtisaari’s role in 
the division of Serbia and independence of Kosovo is widely known. Thus 
Russia’s actions in relation to Abkhazia and South Ossetia have practically 
received acknowledgment from the whole Nobel Committee.

http://www.russiatoday.com/features/news/31699

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