Wake-up calls to secure our common future
PRESS RELEASE 13 OCTOBER 2009
30th Right Livelihood
Awards: Wake-up calls to secure our common future
The
2009 Right Livelihood Awards go to four recipients:
The
Honorary Award goes to DAVID SUZUKI (Canada) "for his
lifetime advocacy of the socially responsible use of
science, and for his massive contribution to raising
awareness about the perils of climate change and building
public support for policies to address
it".
Three recipients receive cash
awards of EUR 50,000 each:
RENÉ NGONGO (Democratic Republic of Congo) is honoured "for his courage in confronting the forces that are destroying the Congo's rainforests and building political support for their conservation and sustainable use".
ALYN WARE (New Zealand) is recognised "for his effective and creative advocacy and initiatives over two decades to further peace education and to rid the world of nuclear weapons".
CATHERINE HAMLIN (Ethiopia) is awarded "for her fifty years dedicated to treating obstetric fistula patients, thereby restoring the health, hope and dignity of thousands of Africa's poorest women".
Quote
The Right Livelihood
Award Jury gave the following motivation for its choice of
Laureates:
"Despite the scientific warnings about the
imminent threat and disastrous impacts of climate change and
despite our knowledge about solutions, the global response
to this crisis is still painfully slow and largely
inadequate. At the same time, the threat from nuclear
weapons has by no means diminished, and the treatable
diseases of poverty shame our common humanity. The 2009
Right Livelihood Award Recipients demonstrate concretely
what has to be done in order to tackle climate change, rid
the world of nuclear weapons, and provide crucial medical
treatment to the poor and marginalised."
Background
Founded in 1980 the Right Livelihood Awards are
presented annually in the Swedish Parliament and are often
referred to as 'Alternative Nobel Prizes'. They were
introduced "to honour and support those offering practical
and exemplary answers to the most urgent challenges facing
us today".
Jakob von Uexkull, a Swedish-German professional philatelist, sold his business to provide the original funding. Since then, the Award has been supported by individual donors.
82 candidates from 46 countries were proposed for the Right Livelihood Awards this year, whereof 36 come from industrialized and 46 from "developing" countries.
ENDS