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Pakistans Edhi among favourites for Nobel Peace Prize
OSLO: Russian dissidents and religious leaders working for Muslim-Christian reconciliation are among the favourites to win the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize when the result is announced on Friday.
The year has brought few notable peace breakthroughs, leaving an unusually large selection of names in circulation and perhaps increasing the chance of a surprise winner.
The betting agency Unibet favours Maggie Gobran, a Coptic Christian nun who runs a childrens mission in Cairo, giving her a 13 per cent chance of winning.
Others mentioned include Pakistani philanthropist and welfare worker Abdul Sattar Edhi and Nigerian religious leaders John Onaiyekan and Mohamed Saad Abubakar, who have helped to calm their countrys Christian-Muslim violence this year.
A direct recognition of the Arab Spring is unlikely, however, as the committee gave part of its 2011 award to the journalist Tawakkol Karman to recognise her work in Yemens transformation, and it rarely visits an issue two years running.
Im pretty sure the committee would like to honour the monumental events in the Middle East, said Jan Egeland, the Director of Human Rights Watch Europe.
But as the Arab Spring turns to autumn, this is becoming very difficult, so an approach may be to look at those who work for dialogue among religions, said Egeland, a former United Nations under-secretary-general.
Pakistan
OSLO: Russian dissidents and religious leaders working for Muslim-Christian reconciliation are among the favourites to win the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize when the result is announced on Friday.
The year has brought few notable peace breakthroughs, leaving an unusually large selection of names in circulation and perhaps increasing the chance of a surprise winner.
The betting agency Unibet favours Maggie Gobran, a Coptic Christian nun who runs a childrens mission in Cairo, giving her a 13 per cent chance of winning.
Others mentioned include Pakistani philanthropist and welfare worker Abdul Sattar Edhi and Nigerian religious leaders John Onaiyekan and Mohamed Saad Abubakar, who have helped to calm their countrys Christian-Muslim violence this year.
A direct recognition of the Arab Spring is unlikely, however, as the committee gave part of its 2011 award to the journalist Tawakkol Karman to recognise her work in Yemens transformation, and it rarely visits an issue two years running.
Im pretty sure the committee would like to honour the monumental events in the Middle East, said Jan Egeland, the Director of Human Rights Watch Europe.
But as the Arab Spring turns to autumn, this is becoming very difficult, so an approach may be to look at those who work for dialogue among religions, said Egeland, a former United Nations under-secretary-general.
Pakistan