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Anti-nuclear campaigners tipped for Nobel Prize

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  • Anti-nuclear campaigners tipped for Nobel Prize

    Anti-nuclear campaigners tipped for Nobel Prize

    By Alister Doyle

    OSLO, Oct 6 (Reuters) - The 2005 Nobel Peace Prize on Friday is likely
    to honour work to contain nuclear weapons 60 years after the
    U.S. bombings of the Japanese cities of Hiroshima and Nagasaki,
    Norway's NRK television said on Thursday.

    The U.N.'s nuclear watchdog and its head, Mohamed ElBaradei,
    U.S. senator Richard Lugar and former Senator Sam Nunn and a
    ban-the-bomb group representing Japanese survivors of the 1945
    U.S. bombings seemed the frontrunners, it said.

    The five-member Norwegian Nobel Committee will announce its choice at
    0900 GMT on Friday in Oslo from a secret list of 199 candidates.

    NRK's veteran correspondent Geir Helljesen, who has often correctly
    tipped the winner of the annual prize, said on the main evening news
    that the committee was likely to find "the fight against nuclear
    weapons both central and topical."

    Worries about the nuclear programmes of North Korea and Iran and fears
    that weapons of mass destruction could fall into the hands of
    terrorists were likely to guide the choice.

    Last year, Helljesen pointed to Kenyan environmentalist Wangari
    Maathai as a likely winner of the award, set up in the 1895 will of
    Swedish philanthropist Alfred Nobel. The prize is worth 10 million
    Swedish crowns ($1.29 million).

    Helljesen mentioned the U.N.'s International Atomic Energy Agency
    (IAEA) and ElBaradei, Lugar and Nunn for their work to dismantle
    ageing nuclear weapons in the former Soviet Union and Japan's Nihon
    Hidankyo, which represents atom bomb victims.

    NO GELDOF, BONO

    Helljesen dismissed speculation that Irish rock star Bob Geldof might
    win the prize for campaigning against poverty in Africa, saying that
    he was not even among nominees. He said that Irish rocker Bono had
    been nominated but would not win.

    An anti-nuclear prize in 2005 would seem to confirm a trend on major
    anniversaries of Hiroshima.

    In 1995, British ban-the-bomb scientist Joseph Rotblat won with his
    Pugwash organisation. In 1985, the award went to a U.S.-Soviet group
    of doctors, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear
    War.

    Centrebet, an Australian Web site which was first to accept bets for
    the prize in 2003, rates the IAEA favourite at 3-1 with both Nihon
    Hidankyo and the Nunn-Lugar team among the top four.

    Helljesen merely noted that Centrebet had also suggested Finnish
    President Martti Ahtisaari, the bookmaker's second favourite for his
    work to broker a peace deal between Indonesia and Aceh rebels.

    The Norwegian Nobel Institute says that it has cracked down on leaks
    and notes that Helljesen is sometimes wrong, like in 1995 when he
    failed to predict Rotblat's prize.

    Some peace researchers say the IAEA has done too little to merit the
    prize amid standoffs with Iran and North Korea. Others say a prize to
    the IAEA could encourage limits on the spread of nuclear arms after
    the end of the Cold War.

    Helljesen mentioned Hidankyo but not its co-chair Senji Yamaguchi,
    also tipped for the prize. Yamaguchi was 14 when the bomb fell on
    Nagasaki.

    "I saw many children die, and when I fled to the mountains that day I
    saw bodies with ... internal organs coming out and faces split in
    half. I saw many such bodies," Yamaguchi told Reuters in an interview
    at a Nagasaki home for the elderly.

    "That is why I want to somehow eliminate nuclear weapons -- for me
    that is everything," he said.

    (Additional reporting by Takanori Isshiki in Nagasaki)

    10/06/05 18:33 ET
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