UNESCO: Africans Urge Cancellation of Obiang Prize

desmond_tutuPrize is an Affront to Efforts to Promote Human Rights and Good Governance in the Continent Citizens of Equatorial Guinea and prominent African figures including Archbishop Emeritus Desmond Tutu, (Pictured) Graa Machel, Nobel laureate Wole Soyinka, and author Chinua Achebe wrote to UNESCOs Executive Board

The letter, signed by 127 African laureates, scholars, human rights defenders, and citizens of Equatorial Guinea, cited the record of serious abuses and mismanagement of the countrys wealth by the eponymous funder of the prize, President Teodoro Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea.

The continued existence of this prize is inimical to UNESCOs mission and an affront to Africans everywhere who work for the betterment of our countries, the letter said.

Equatorial Guinea has the highest GDP per capita on the continent, yet 3 out of 4 Equatoguineans live in poverty. There are no research centers in Equatorial Guinea that would enable a citizen of the country to qualify for the UNESCO-Obiang award, and even basic education and health care remain unattainable for the vast majority. Civil liberties are heavily curtailed: in August, four Equatoguinean refugees were abducted from neighboring Benin, tortured for months and then summarily tried and executed.

While Equatorial Guineas government has tried to characterize opposition to this prize as racist and colonialist, in fact many Africans have been vocal opponents of the prize, said Tutu Alicante, an Equatoguinean and Executive Director of the human rights organization EG Justice. Not all Africans believe that a dictator should be able to purchase legitimacy in Paris. Many recognize that this prize harms Africans.

UNESCOs Executive Board has a responsibility to protect the organizations integrity, which this prize places in jeopardy.

[T]he diversion of wealth that should benefit Equatoguineans to finance a prize honoring President Obiang runs counter to the objective of improving human dignity that underpins the mission of UNESCO, the letter said.

The letter is also available for download in English, French, and Spanish.

Post published in: Politics

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