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Posted By: diggingdeeper Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 9th Dec 2017 11:54pm
The Sean MacBride Peace Prize was awarded by the International Peace Bureau to Jeremy Corbyn in Geneva on Friday.

The UK media chose to ignore this event, though they did mention his anti-corruption speech at the UN on the same day and location.

The two other winners were the All Okinawa Council Against Henoko New Base and Noam Chomsky.
Posted By: fish5133 Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 10th Dec 2017 9:38am
Bit ironic receiving a peace award in the name of an ira chief of staff.
Posted By: granny Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 10th Dec 2017 10:19am
Originally Posted by fish5133
Bit ironic receiving a peace award in the name of an ira chief of staff.


Did wonder who he was. crazy
Posted By: Excoriator Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 10th Dec 2017 10:27am
Not unusual. Euphemisms or downright lies are the norm when you are talking politics and wars. Why do you think we have a 'ministry of Peace' rather than a Ministry of War' which is what it really is.

Go read your copy of 1984.
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 10th Dec 2017 4:07pm
Sean MacBride received the Nobel Peace prize just labelling him as the Chief of Staff of the IRA is a bit misleading.
Posted By: Gibbo Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 11th Dec 2017 11:11am
Never heard to Sean MacBride or this peace prize.

Who were previous famous winners?

Seems to me the Corbyn worshippers are just angry it wasn't given airtime, probably because of SNOWMAGEDDON.
Posted By: diggingdeeper Re: Sean MacBride Peace Prize - 11th Dec 2017 11:29am
A summary of Sean MacBride ...

Quote
MacBride began his career as a fighter against British colonial rule, studied law and rose to high office in the independent Irish Republic. He was a winner of the Lenin Peace Prize, and also the Nobel Peace Prize (1974) – awarded for his wide-ranging work, which included roles such as co-founder of Amnesty International, Secretary-General of the International Commission of Jurists, and UN Commissioner for Namibia. While at IPB he launched the Bradford Proposals on World Disarmament, which laid the ground for the first UN Special Session on Disarmament, held in 1978.

He also launched the MacBride Appeal against Nuclear Weapons, which gathered the names of over 11,000 international lawyers from all parts of the world, many of them at the very highest level. This effort paved the way for the World Court Project on nuclear weapons, in which IPB played a major role. This resulted in the historic 1996 Advisory Opinion of the International Court of Justice on the Use and Threat of Nuclear Weapons. MacBride died in 1988, but the Prize was not established until 1992, IPB’s centenary year.


Previous Winners (most of which many won't have heard of because our press doesn't publicise peace efforts as much as the opposite).

2016: Colin ARCHER, IPB’s Secretary-General for the last 26 years.

2015: The people and the island communities of Lampedusa (Italy) and Jeju Island (South Korea), in recognition of the profound commitment they have demonstrated to peace and social justice.

2014: The people and government of the Republic of the Marshall Islands, in recognition of the legal case submitted by the RMI to the International Court of Justice, against all 9 states with nuclear weapons, for failure to honour their disarmament commitments.

2013: Private Chelsea (Bradley) MANNING, US whistleblower jailed for 35 years for revealing information about US war crimes.

2012: Lina BEN MHENNI, Tunisian blogger and activist; and Nawal EL-SAADAWI, Egyptian feminist writer, activist, physician and psychiatrist. Award presented by Irish President Michael D Higgins (1st winner of the Prize) at a ceremony preceding IPB’s annual gathering, held in Dublin, November 2012.

2011 Hanaa EDWAR, human rights activist, Iraq, and Peter BECKER, anti-nuclear lawyer, Germany. Awarded at IPB’s annual gathering, Potsdam, Oct. 2011

2010 Binalakshmi NEPRAM, founder of Manipur Women Gun Survivors Network and Secretary-General of Control Arms Foundation of India. Awarded at IPB’s Nobel-centenary conference, Oslo, Sept. 2010

2009 Betty REARDON, peace educator, USA. Awarded Nov. 2009 at the IPB’s annual conference in Washington D.C.

2008 Jackie CABASSO, has been involved in (US) nuclear disarmament, peace and environmental advocacy on local, national and international level for over 25 years, awarded in Copenhagen.

2007 Jayantha DHANAPALA, Sri Lankan Diplomat, awarded at Ceremony in Bibliotheca Alexandrina.

2006 Mayors for Peace Awarded in Helsinki to Tadatoshi AKIBA, Mayor of Hiroshima; and in Nagasaki to Iccho ITOH, Mayor Nagasaki (who was subsequently murdered).

2005 No award made

2004 Leaders of the Geneva Initiative on the Middle East.

2003 Nihon HIDANKYO, the Japanese hibakusha or survivors of the A bomb attacks on Hiroshima and Nagasaki in 1945. They have devoted the rest of their lives to the elimination of nuclear weapons.

2002 Barbara LEE, only member of US Congress to vote against the war on Afghanistan.

2001 Rosalie BERTELL, Canada-based public health advocate, scientist, author – who has put her professional skills at the service of victims of nuclear and other disasters. (Chernobyl, Bhopal etc).

2000 Praful BIDWAI and Achin VANAIK, Indian journalists who have been at the forefront of the international campaign against the nuclearisation of South Asia. The IPB salutes their persistence, commitment and scholarly attention to detail which have earned their work wide acclaim.

1999 Barbara GLADYSCH, Mothers for Peace, Germany, as a tribute to her outstanding and long-lasting commitment, both to disarmament and to practical solidarity with victims of war and disaster.

1998 John HUME, a member of the European Parliament for consistantly advocating non-violent solutions in Northern Ireland. Subsequently awarded Nobel Peace Prize.

1997 The Seeds of Hope Group, UK for disarming a Hawk aircraft bound for Indonesia.

1996 Selim BESLAGIC, Mayor of Tuzla, Bosnia, a key proponent of a multi-ethnic solution to the Bosnian crisis.

1995 The Committee of Soldiers’ Mothers of Russia, foremost among Russian citizens’ groups opposing the war in Chechnya.

1994 Mordechai VANUNU, Israel, a former nuclear technician, sentenced to 18 years solitary confinement for revealing details of Israel’s nuclear arsenal.

1993 Hilda LINI, Vanuatu, a former health minister who played a key role in the WHO’s decision to approve a request to the World Court on the legal status of nuclear weapons.

1992 Michael D. HIGGINS, Ireland, human rights lawyer, President of Ireland since 11 November 2011.


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