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IAEA chief accepts Nobel Peace Prize
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| The International Atomic Energy Agency
(IAEA) and its director general Mohamed ElBaradei on Saturday received the
2005 Nobel Peace Prize in Oslo. |
BEIJING, Dec. 11 (Xinhuanet) -- The International Atomic
Energy Agency (IAEA) and its director general Mohamed ElBaradei on Saturday
received the 2005 Nobel Peace Prize at a ceremony in Oslo for their work to
prevent the spread of nuclear arms and promote the safe use of atomic power.
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| IAEA chief Mohamed ElBaradei delivers a
speech at the awarding
ceremony. | While receiving the
award, ElBaradei warned that humanity faces a choice between atomic weapons and
survival.
"I have no doubt that if we hope to escape self-destruction,
then nuclear weapons should have no place in our collective conscience, and no
role in our security," the 63-year-old Egyptian said.
ElBaradei and IAEA Board of Governors Chairman Yukiya Amano of
Japan received the prestigious prize, consisting of a Nobel diploma, a gold
medal and 10 million Swedish kronor (1.3 million US dollars) to be split between
them, from chairman of the Nobel Committee Ole Mjoes at a formal ceremony in
Oslo's City Hall.
Six decades after the United States dropped atomic bombs on two
Japanese cities and 15 years after the Cold War ended, the threat of nuclear
nightmare remains strong, ElBaradei said.
"The Nobel Peace Prize is a powerful message," ElBaradei said.
"A durable peace is not a single achievement, but an environment, a process and
a commitment."
ElBaradei said the world faced "threats without borders" that
could not be tackled by building walls, developing bigger weapons or dispatching
troops, but only through multilateral cooperation.
He urged three concrete actions:
better protection of nuclear material and a strengthened system of verification,
control of the nuclear fuel cycle and accelerated disarmament efforts.
The IAEA was founded in 1957 to promote civilian use of nuclear
energy and at the same time work to eliminate the proliferation of nuclear
weapons.
At a separate ceremony later on Saturday, the winners of this
year's Literature, Medicine, Physics, Chemistry and Economics prizes will
receive their awards from King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden in Stockholm's Concert
Hall.
The Nobel Prizes are usually announced in October and are handed
out every year on Dec. 10, the anniversary of the 1896 death of Alfred Nobel, a
Swedish industrialist and the inventor of dynamite. Enditem |