Nobel Peace laureate Muratov says war between Russia and Ukraine
possible
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[December 10, 2021]
By Nerijus Adomaitis and Gwladys Fouche
OSLO (Reuters) -People in positions of
power in Russia are actively promoting the idea of war, and conflict
with Ukraine is now a distinct possibility, Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Dmitry Muratov said on Friday.
Receiving his award at Oslo City Hall, Muratov said that in Russia it
was common to think that politicians who avoided bloodshed were weak,
while threatening the world with war was "the duty of true patriots".
Muratov, editor-in-chief of Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta, won the
2021 award jointly with Maria Ressa of the Philippines, co-founder of
news site Rappler, in recognition for their fight for freedom of
expression.
"The powerful actively promote the idea of war," he said. "Moreover, in
(the) heads of some crazy geopoliticians, a war between Russia and
Ukraine is not something impossible any longer."
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U.S. officials have said Russia could soon invade Ukraine following a
build-up of troops near the Ukrainian border. Moscow has denied it is
planning an invasion.
Muratov also said journalism in Russia was going "through a dark
valley", with over a hundred journalists, media outlets, human rights
defenders and non-governmental organisations having been branded as
"foreign agents".
"In Russia, this means "enemies of the people," Muratov said, dedicating
his prize to "the entire community of investigative journalists" and his
colleagues at Novaya Gazeta who lost their lives.
They include Anna Politkovskaya, gunned down in her apartment building
in Moscow 15 years ago after angering the Kremlin with dispatches from
the war in Chechnya.
Muratov's co-laureate Ressa reiterated her call for reform of social
media platforms.
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![](../images/121021PIX/news_u39.jpg)
Nobel Peace Prize winner Maria Ressa takes a selfie with co-prize
winner Dmitry Muratov during the award ceremony of the Nobel Peace
Prize at the Oslo City Hall in Oslo, Norway, December 10, 2021.
Heiko Junge/NTB/via REUTERS
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"Our greatest need today is to transform that hate and violence, the
toxic sludge that's coursing through our information ecosystem,
prioritised by American internet companies that make more money by
spreading that hate and triggering the worst in us."
"For the US, reform or revoke section 230, the law that treats
social media platforms like utilities."
Ressa and Muratov are the first journalists to receive the Nobel
prize since Germany's Carl von Ossietzky won the 1935 award for
revealing his country's secret rearmament programme.
Ressa noted in her speech that Von Ossietzky was never able to
collect his award as he died in a Nazi concentration camp.
"By giving this to journalists today, the Nobel committee is
signalling a similar historical moment, another existential point
for democracy," she said.
(Additional reporting by Simon Johnson and Johan Ahlander in
Stockholm; editing by John Stonestreet)
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