Over 300 Nobel Peace Prize nominees counted, possibly including Trump
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US President Donald Trump is among the big names being floated this year for the Nobel Peace Prize, but the identity of the candidates - 338 nominations this year - is kept confidential.
PHOTO: AFP
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OSLO - Over 300 people are nominated for this year’s Nobel Peace Prize, organisers said on March 5, with politicians claiming they had put US President Donald Trump and Pope Francis forward for the award.
In line with Nobel statutes, the identity of the candidates is kept confidential for 50 years – but the two are among the big names floated this year, along with former Nato chief Jens Stoltenberg.
The 338 overall nominations comprise 244 individuals and 94 organisations, the Norwegian Nobel Institute said in statement.
That was a significant increase from the previous year’s 286 nominations, but shy of the record 376 nominations registered in 2016.
Although the prize committee is always tight-lipped about the nominees, those eligible to nominate – including former laureates, lawmakers and cabinet ministers from any country in the world, and some university professors – are free to reveal the name of the person or organisation they have proposed.
On March 3, US Congressman Darrell Issa declared in a post on X that he too would nominate Mr Trump for the prestigious prize, adding: “No one deserves it more.”
Mr Issa’s office was later cited by US media as saying that the nomination was motivated by Mr Trump’s efforts in the Middle East.
Mr Issa’s nomination would be submitted after the submission deadline, but Ukrainian parliamentarian Oleksandr Merezhko also nominated Mr Trump back in November in a move to grab the then president-elect’s attention, according to Ukrainian media.
Mr Trump has been proposed as a candidate in previous years too, but a nomination this year would be particularly eye-catching.
He has sparked controversy by opening talks with Moscow
In January, thousands of people signed a UK petition calling for Frenchwoman Gisele Pelicot
She won praise for her open, public stance during the trial of her ex-husband, who was convicted of letting strangers rape her
Norwegian members of Parliament have this year told Norwegian media that they have nominated Mr Stoltenberg, UN chief Antonio Guterres and Pope Francis for the prize.
In 2024, the Nobel Peace Prize went to Japan’s atomic bomb survivors’ group Nihon Hidankyo

