Aung San Suu Kyi to keep Nobel Peace Prize
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Aung San Suu Kyi to keep Nobel Peace Prize

Flashback: Aung San Suu Kyi formally accepts the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize and the $1.3 million in cash in a speech on June 12, 2012, the first time she could leave Myanmar after some 20 years under house arrest. Her late husband Michael Aris and sons accepted the prize and money at the actual award ceremony in 1992. (File photo)
Flashback: Aung San Suu Kyi formally accepts the 1991 Nobel Peace Prize and the $1.3 million in cash in a speech on June 12, 2012, the first time she could leave Myanmar after some 20 years under house arrest. Her late husband Michael Aris and sons accepted the prize and money at the actual award ceremony in 1992. (File photo)

STAVANGER, Norway: The Nobel Peace Prize to Aung San Suu Kyi will not be withdrawn in the light of a United Nations report that said Myanmar's military carried out genocide in its mass murders of Muslim Rohingya, the Norwegian Nobel Committee said on Wednesday.

"It's important to remember that a Nobel Prize, whether in physics, literature or peace, is awarded for some prize-worthy effort or achievement of the past," said Olav Njoelstad, the secretary of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

"Aung San Suu Kyi won the Nobel Peace Prize for her fight for democracy and freedom up until 1991, the year she was awarded the prize," he said.

And the rules regulating the Nobel Prizes do not allow for a prize to be withdrawn, he added.

On Monday, UN investigators said Myanmar's military carried out mass killings and gang rapes with "genocidal intent", and the commander-in-chief and five generals should be prosecuted for the gravest crimes under international law.

Suu Kyi received the award for “her non-violent struggle for democracy and human rights” while standing up against military rulers.

In addition to UN accusations she directly enabled and then defended the genocide of the Rohingya, Suu Kyi, who leads the Myanmar government and won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1991 for campaigning for democracy, has been criticised in many quarters for failing to speak out against the army crackdown in Rakhine State.

An online petition signed by more than 386,000 people at Change.org is calling for Suu Kyi to be stripped of her Peace Prize over the persecution of the Rohingya.

The Norwegian Nobel Committee consists of a panel of five Norwegians, mostly former politicians and academics, that reflect the different forces in the Norwegian Parliament. The other Nobel prizes are awarded in Sweden.

Last year, the head of the Committee, Berit Reiss-Andersen, also said it would not strip the award after previous criticism of Aung San Suu Kyi's role in the Rohingya crisis.

"We don't do it. It's not our task to oversee or censor what a laureate does after the prize has been won," she said in a television interview. "The prize winners themselves have to safeguard their own reputations."

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