Nobel Peace Prize is not a bargaining tool

Shailesh T, Porvorim | 17th January, 11:11 pm

The recent spectacle of Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina  Machado presenting her Nobel Peace Prize medal to former US President  Donald Trump at the White House was deeply troubling.

This act  was misguided for several reasons. First, a Nobel Peace Prize is not a  gift to be handed over to another person to curry favour or influence  political support. The Norwegian Nobel Committee has made it clear that  the prize itself cannot be transferred, and the honour remains with the  original winner, regardless of who holds the physical medal.

Second,  using a globally respected symbol of peace to try to gain backing from a  foreign leader undermines the very values the award is meant to  represent. Peace prizes are meant to honour efforts for peace and  democracy — not as bargaining chips in political negotiations. By  offering the medal to one of the world’s most polarising figures, the  gesture risked cheapening the award and turning serious international  recognition into a publicity stunt.

Finally, this move also  appears to confuse gratitude with political expediency. Genuine support  for democracy and human rights should be based on principles, not on  gestures that could be seen as pandering. True leadership in Venezuela’s  struggle for democratic change deserves respect but not at the cost of  dignity or global norms.

If democratic leaders resort to symbolic  theatrics to secure foreign endorsement, they may weaken their moral  authority at home and abroad. The Nobel Peace Prize should stand above  politics — and so should those who have been honoured with it.


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