A Nobel Peace Prize for the World's "Poorest" President?
A Dutch NGO called the Drugs Peace Institute recently made a bold proposal to Uruguayan President José Mujica.
The organization is pushing for a Nobel Peace Prize nomination for the
76-year-old head of state, on account of his efforts to legalize
marijuana in the South American country.
"We have come to Uruguay to ask for [Mujica's] permission to campaign on
his behalf," said Frans Bronkhorst of the Drug Peace Institute.
"We believe that he has made a proposal…that aims to end this [global]
drug war, which has done nothing but serve the interests of obscure
parties," Bronkhorst told Uruguayan newspaper El Observador
in an interview published on March 13th.
In mid 2012, Mujica promoted a bill that
would legalize the consumption of Marijuana in Uruguay, and regulate the production and sale of the plant.
The proposal, known to Uruguayans as the marijuana law, was tabled by
Mujica at the end of last year after polls showed that most Uruguayans
did not approve of legalizing marijuana. Regardless, Mujica continues to
support the marijuana law, and it
could be approved later this year if congressmen in Uruguay garner more public support for the initiative.
The Uruguayan president has not yet made any statements about the Nobel
campaign proposal presented to his advisers by the Drug Peace Institute.
Bronkhorst said that his organization would gather "the voices of
victims of the drug war" in its campaign to get a Nobel Peace Prize
nomination for Mujica. He said organizations that campaign against
prohibitionist drug policies currently lack a global symbol or a famous
spokesman, and added that Mujica could fill this void. "He could be the
Bob Marley of the 21st century," Bronkhorst joked with El Observador.
Every year in September, the Nobel Peace Prize committee sends out
nomination ballots to some 300 academics, former prize winners and
government representatives around the world.
To be nominated for the peace prize, Mujica would have to secure the
support of one of the people receiving a ballot. Winning the prize is
far more difficult, as Mujica would have to defeat hundreds of worthy
nominees from all over the world.
Bronkhorst argued that the Uruguayan president was a strong candidate
for the peace prize, not just because of his efforts to change drug
policy but because of his personal background.
"He is a former [left-wing] guerrilla, who abandoned weapons, and became
president through the ballot box in a democratic process," Bronkhorst
said.
Mujica currently donates 90 percent of his salary to charitable causes, and leads a
simple lifestyle which has earned him the nickname "the world's poorest president."
If he were to win the nobel peace prize, Mujica would become the first
person to receive this honor for tackling prohibitionist drug policies.
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