UNESCO Suspends Dictator Prize After Global Protest
MADRID–The Center for Economic and Social Rights and its partners welcomed UNESCO’s decision today to suspend, indefinitely, the prize funded by and named after President Obiang of Equatorial Guinea. The groups reaffirmed their call for UNESCO to ultimately abolish the award.
“Teodoro Obiang’s regime undermines everything UNESCO stands for,” said Tutu Alicante, executive director of the organization EG Justice. “We are pleased the Executive Board has acted to protect the organization’s integrity but will continue working for the prize’s cancellation.”
The $3 million UNESCO Obiang Nguema Mbasogo International Prize for Research in the Life Sciences was set up in 2008 but suspended pending further discussion in June 2010. The decision to postpone the prize indefinitely came through an agreement brokered at UNESCO’s executive board meeting this month. According to these terms, the prize cannot be awarded unless supported by all member states.
Prominent African
leaders, Latin
American literary figures, Nobel
laureates, scientists
and public health professionals, press
freedom groups, Cano
prize winners, and rights organizations
from around the world came together in an unprecedented effort to challenge the
prize, citing serious concerns about President Obiang’s record of corruption and abuse. Public figures
involved in the campaign included: Nobel laureates Archbishop Emeritus Desmond
Tutu, Wole Soyinka, Mario Vargas
Llosa, Claude Cohen-Tannoudji, and John Polanyi; author Chinua Achebe; human
rights advocate Graça Machel; and over sixty professionals from Equatorial
Guinea.
“The Obiang family is facing ongoing
allegations of corruption with cases in Europe, Africa, and North America. Why
weren’t red flags triggered when UNESCO first agreed to accept Obiang’s
millions?” said Ken Hurwitz, senior legal officer with the Open Society Justice
Initiative. “Now that the prize has been suspended, UNESCO should implement
proper safeguards to address the systemic gaps in oversight revealed by this
controversy.”
Equatorial Guinea’s vast oil
wealth gives it the highest per-capita GDP in sub-Saharan Africa, yet its health
and development indicators are on par with the poorest countries in the world.
UNESCO currently has no procedures in place to screen private donations and
prevent money laundering.
The Center for Economic and Social Rights is an independent nongovernmental human rights organization that works to promote social justice through human rights
EG Justice promotes human rights and the rule of law, transparency, and civil society participation to build a just Equatorial Guinea.
The Open Society Justice Initiative
uses law to protect and empower people around the world. Through litigation,
advocacy, research, and technical assistance, the Justice Initiative promotes
human rights and builds legal capacity for open societies.