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Liu Xiaobo: a splendid nominee for a
Nobel
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By Vaclav Havel, et al
Thursday, Jan 21, 2010, Page 8
On Christmas Day, one of China¡¦s best-known rights activists, writer and
university professor Liu Xiaobo (¼B¾åªi), was condemned to 11 years in prison. Liu
is a drafter of Charter 08, a petition inspired by Czechoslovakia¡¦s Charter 77,
calling on Beijing to adhere to its laws and Constitution, and demanding the
open election of officials, freedom of religion and expression and abolition of
¡§subversion¡¨ laws.
For his bravery and clarity of thought about China¡¦s future, Liu deserves the
2010 Nobel Peace Prize. There are two reasons why we believe that Liu would be a
worthy recipient of that prestigious award.
First and foremost, he stands in the tradition of Peace Prize laureates
recognized for their contribution to the struggle for human rights. Nobel
laureates such as Martin Luther King, Lech Walesa and Aung San Suu Kyi are but a
few of the many examples that the Nobel Committee has recognized in previous
years.
The concepts that Liu and his colleagues put down on paper in December 2008 are
both universal and timeless. These ideals ¡X respect for human rights and human
dignity, and the responsibility of citizens to ensure that their governments
respect those rights ¡X represent humanity¡¦s highest aspirations.
Should the Nobel Committee choose to recognize Liu¡¦s courage and sacrifice in
articulating these ideals, it would not only draw global attention to the
injustice of Liu¡¦s 11-year sentence, but also help to amplify within China the
universal and humanistic values for which Liu has spent so much of his life
fighting.
The second reason why Liu deserves the Nobel Peace Prize resonates with Alfred
Nobel¡¦s original intent for the award. In working to promote human rights,
political reform and democratization in China, Liu has made a significant
contribution to the values of peace and fraternity among nations that Nobel had
in mind when he created the award more than a century ago.
Of course, democratization does not automatically guarantee better behavior on
the world stage. But it does facilitate a full and rigorous public debate over
key questions of a state¡¦s foreign and domestic policies. This active and
searching conversation, the hallmark of a democratic polity, is the best hope
for better decisions by governments, both at home and abroad.
Liu¡¦s committed advocacy on behalf of democracy in China is, above all, intended
for the benefit of the Chinese people. But his courage and example may help to
accelerate the dawn of the day when China¡¦s participation in international
affairs is aided by the expertise and oversight of civil-society groups, an
independent media and an engaged citizenry able to express its views through the
ballot box.
It is primarily for these two reasons that we believe that Liu would be a worthy
recipient of the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize. In conferring on Liu one of the world¡¦s
highest honors, the Committee would be signaling once again the importance of
human rights and democracy on the one hand, and world peace and international
solidarity on the other.
Liu¡¦s harsh prison sentence was meant as an exemplary measure, a warning to all
other Chinese who might want to follow his path. We are convinced that there are
moments when exemplary civic engagement, such as Liu¡¦s, requires an exemplary
response. Awarding him the Peace Prize is the response that his courage
deserves.
Vaclav Havel is former president of the Czech Republic; the Dalai Lama is the
spiritual leader of Tibetan Buddhism; Andre Glucksmann is a philosopher; Vartan
Gregorian is president of Carnegie Corporation of New York; Mike Moore is former
director of the WTO; Karel Schwarzenberg is former foreign minister of the Czech
Republic; Desmond Tutu is a Nobel Peace Prize laureate; Grigory Yavlinsky is
former chairman of the Russian United Democratic Party, Yabloko.
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