Abiy Ahmed Awarded Nobel Peace Prize
Mr. Abiy, the prime minister of Ethiopia, spearheaded a peace accord in his region and catalyzed reforms at home.
Abiy
Ahmed, the prime minister of Ethiopia, was awarded the Nobel Peace
Prize on Friday, for his work in restarting peace talks with neighboring
Eritrea, ending a long stalemate between the two countries.
Dr Abiy Ahmed prime minister of Ethiopia
Why did he win?
Mr. Abiy, 43, broke through two decades of frozen conflict between his vast country, Africa’s second most populous, and Eritrea, its small and isolated neighbor.
The
two nations share deep ethnic and cultural ties, but until July last
year they had been locked into a state of neither peace nor war, a conflict that had separated families, complicated geopolitics and cost the lives of more than 80,000 people during two years of border violence.
Why is the work important?
Ethiopia
and Eritrea share deep ethnic and cultural ties, but until July last
year they had been locked into a state of neither peace nor war, a
conflict that had separated families, complicated geopolitics and cost
the lives of more than 80,000 people during two years of border
violence.
The
peace accord signed more than a year ago between Mr. Abiy and President
Isaias Afwerki of Eritrea has only slowly translated into concrete
steps to reconnect the two nations.
But
it has been held up as an example of how historic change can come about
in even the oldest and most intractable conflicts. Diplomatic relations
between Ethiopia and Eritrea have resumed, and the two leaders and
senior officials from the two nations have met frequently to discuss how
to reconnect their nations.
Importantly,
telecommunications have been restored, allowing families that were
split up in the war to contact each other. In the days that followed
this breakthrough, some Ethiopians called Eritrean numbers randomly, and
vice versa, just to speak to someone on the other side, simply because
they could. Others tracked down parents, siblings and friends.
When
the first commercial Ethiopian Airlines flight from Addis Ababa to the
Eritrean capital, Asmara, landed on July 18 last year, passengers
stepping off the plane fell to their knees and kissed the ground. Two
sisters separated from their father in the war, stuck on opposite sides
of the border, embraced him for the first time after 20 years of growing
up with him.
Who won the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize?
Nadia Murad and Denis Mukwege jointly won the award in 2018. Ms. Murad, 26, a Yazidi woman, became the voice and face of those who survived sexual violence at the hands of Islamic State
militants. Dr. Mukwege, 64, is a Congolese gynecological surgeon who
has treated thousands of women in his war torn home country.
Who else has won a Nobel Prize this year?
- The prize for medicine and physiology was awarded to William G. Kaelin Jr., Peter J. Ratcliffe and Gregg L. Semenza for their work in discovering how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability.
- The prize for physics was awarded to James Peebles, Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz for their contributions to the understanding of the evolution of the universe and the Earth’s place in the cosmos.
- The prize for chemistry was given to three scientists — John B. Goodenough, M. Stanley Whittingham and Akira Yoshino — who developed lithium-ion batteries, the energy storage systems that have revolutionized portable electronics.
- The 2018 and 2019 Nobel Prizes in Literature were both awarded this week to Olga Tokarczuk, a Polish author, and Peter Handke, an Austrian writer. Last year’s prize was postponed after the husband of an academy member was accused, and ultimately convicted, of rape. That crisis that led to the departure of several board members and required the intervention of the King of Sweden.
