ttp://thescotsman.co.uk/index.cfm?id=140952002

Blair and Bush nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

Fraser Nelson westminster editor

THE collapse of the Taleban was deemed enough reward for Tony Blair
and George Bush’s robust Afghanistan campaign. But yesterday, they
received an unexpected extra: a nomination for the Nobel Peace Prize.

Harald Tom Nesvik, a right-wing Norwegian MP with Nobel prize
nomination rights, has put their names forward for the 2002 list.

He is arguing that the two Western leaders have demonstrated their
commitment to peace by making it abundantly clear they will not
tolerate terrorist attacks.

"The background for my nomination is their decisive action against
terrorism, something I believe in the future will be the greatest
threat to peace," Mr Nesvik said yesterday. "Unfortunately, sometimes
you have to use force to secure peace."

The Oslo-based awards committee has been accepting nominations from 1
February.

However, Mr Blair and Mr Bush are nowhere near a shortlist. Last
year, 136 individuals and groups were nominated; this year’s count is
expected to exceed 160, with many nominees linked to 11 September and
its aftermath. The nomination would please Mr Blair, who argued
throughout that the bombing campaign was intended to lay the
foundations for lasting world peace.

Today, Gordon Brown, the Chancellor, will add to this theme by
spelling out a £50 billion aid package billed as a "global new deal"
which will share the West’s wealth with destitute countries and pre-
vent a resurgence of terrorism. In the last 40 years, the Nobel Peace
Prize has only come to the United Kingdom once - when David Trimble
and John Hume were recognised in 1998 for their work in the Northern
Ireland peace process.

Other laureates include Nelson Mandela and de FW Klerk, Mikhail
Gorbachev, Lech Walesa, Martin Luther King and Mother Teresa.
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