‘Heroic effort at great personal cost’: Edward Snowden nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

A Swedish sociology professor has nominated Edward Snowden for the Nobel Peace Prize. He says the NSA whistleblower could help “save the prize from the disrepute incurred by the hasty and ill-conceived decision” to give the 2009 award to Barack Obama.
In his letter addressed to the Norwegian Nobel Committee, Stefan Svallfors praised Snowden for his “heroic effort at great personal cost.” He stated that by revealing the existence and the scale of the US surveillance programs, Snowden showed “individuals can stand up for fundamental rights and freedoms.”
Mejlar till Norska Nobelkommittén. pic.twitter.com/RCYqxHvOyO
— Stefan Svallfors (@StefanSvallfors) July 13, 2013
“This example is important because since the Nuremberg trials
  in 1945 has been clear that the slogan ‘I was just following
  orders’ is never claimed as an excuse for acts contrary to human
  rights and freedoms,” Professor Svallfors wrote.
  
  He emphasized that the decision to award the 2013 prize to Edward
  Snowden would also “help to save the Nobel Peace Prize from
  the disrepute incurred by the hasty and ill-conceived decision to
  award US President Barack Obama 2009 award.”
  But Kristian Berg Harpviken, senior researcher and deputy
  director at the International Peace Research Institute Oslo
  (PRIO), told Interfax news agency that it is very unlikely that
  Snowden will become a Nobel Prize laureate.
  
  Harpviken said that all major deadlines have passed, meaning that
  Snowden will have very little chance of making the shortlist.
  
  When asked whether Snowden deserves the award, Harpviken replied
  with a “careful yes.”

  The head of the International Committee of the Russian State Duma
  Aleksey Pushkov has also argued that the US won’t let Nobel Peace
  Prize go to Snowden.
  
  "Not in a million years will the United States allow Snowden
  to get the Peace Prize. But his nomination is significant. Many
  in the West see him as a champion of democracy," he tweeted
  on Monday.
  
  As a sociology professor at Umeå University, which has recently
  top-ranked among the world’s best young universities, Svallfors
  is included in the limited circuit of people who can deliver
  nominations to the Nobel committee. These include members of
  international courts and national assemblies; university rectors;
  professors of social sciences, history, philosophy, law and
  theology; directors of peace research institutes and foreign
  policy institutes.
  
  Nominations for laureates should be postmarked for consideration
  in the following December's prizes no later than February 1 for
  the advisers to review the short list of the suggested
  candidates.
  
  Since 1901, when the Nobel Peace Prize was launched, it has been
  awarded to a hundred individuals who “shall have done the most
  or the best work for fraternity between nations, for the
  abolition or reduction of standing armies and for the holding and
  promotion of peace congresses.” 
The Nobel Peace prize however, is corrupt. Overseen by Norwegian and Swedish establishments, it has become an instrument of foreign policy.
— WikiLeaks (@wikileaks) July 15, 2013
  Last year Bradley Manning, the US soldier accused of passing
  secret materials to WikiLeaks, was nominated for the Nobel Peace
  Prize. The nomination was proposed by the Movement of Icelandic
  Parliament, which asserted that revelations produced by the
  documents Manning allegedly exposed “have helped to fuel a
  worldwide discussion about America’s overseas engagements,
  civilian war casualties, imperialistic manipulations, and rules
  of engagement.”
  In 2011 founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks Julian Assange was nominated for a Nobel Peace Prize
  by Norwegian MP Snorre Valen.
  
  Snowden’s nomination is expected to be reviewed by the committee
  for next year's prize. Should Snowden get the coveted award, he
  would be the youngest Nobel Peace Laureate in the history of the
  prize.  
  
  The 30-year-old nominee is wanted in the US on charges of
  espionage after revealing secret NSA
  surveillance programs and could face the death penalty in his
  home country. He fled American soil for Hong Kong in May and then
  flew to Moscow, where he has been stuck in an airport transit
  zone for three weeks.
  
  On Friday Snowden said he is seeking political asylum in Russia because he cannot fly to
  Latin America.

  During his meeting with rights activists and lawyers at Moscow’s
  Sheremetyevo Airport, Snowden explained what was behind his
  decision to leak the secret NSA spying programs. He said he did
  what he believed to be right and “began a campaign to correct
  this wrongdoing.” Snowden underlined that he did not seek to
  enrich himself, or to sell American secrets.  
  
“I took what I knew to the public, so what affects all of us
  can be discussed by all of us in the light of day, and I asked
  the world for justice,” Snowden said, adding that he does not
  regret his decision.
  
  Russian migration officials said that they have not yet received an asylum plea from the
  NSA leaker.
  
  America has launched a persecution campaign in response,
  “threatening with sanctions” countries who stand up for
  Snowden’s rights.
  
  So far, three countries in Latin America – Venezuela, Bolivia and
  Nicaragua – said they could offer Asylum to the American
  whistleblower.
  
  Russian President Vladimir Putin had earlier stated that Moscow
  would grant him asylum if Snowden stopped activities aimed at
  harming “our American partners.”













