Published on: Dec 10 2014 6:41PM

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kailash Satyarthi receives the medal and the diploma during the Nobel Peace Prize awards ceremony at the City Hall in Oslo on December 10. Reuters
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai poses with the medal and the diploma during the Nobel Peace Prize awards ceremony at the City Hall in Oslo on December 10. Reuters
Oslo, December 10
India’s Kailash Satyarthi received the Nobel Peace Prize for 2014 today, sharing it with Pakistan’s Malala Yousafzai, the youngest ever Nobel laureate, for their work on promoting child rights in the troubled sub-continent, where millions are deprived of their childhood and education.
Satyarthi, Malala receive Nobel Peace Prize
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Kailash Satyarthi receives the medal and the diploma during the Nobel Peace Prize awards ceremony at the City Hall in Oslo on December 10. Reuters
Nobel Peace Prize laureate Malala Yousafzai poses with the medal and the diploma during the Nobel Peace Prize awards ceremony at the City Hall in Oslo on December 10. Reuters
Oslo, December 10
India’s Kailash Satyarthi received the Nobel Peace Prize for 2014 today, sharing it with Pakistan’s Malala Yousafzai, the youngest ever Nobel laureate, for their work on promoting child rights in the troubled sub-continent, where millions are deprived of their childhood and education.
“Satyarthi and Yousafzai are precisely the people
whom Alfred Nobel in his will calls ‘champions of peace’,” Chairman of
the Norwegian Nobel Committee Thorbjorn Jagland said in his speech
before awarding them the prize.
“A young girl and a somewhat older man, one from
Pakistan and one from India, one Muslim, the other Hindu; both symbols
of what the world needs: more unity. Fraternity between the nations!,”
he added.
Satyarthi, 60, who gave up his job as an
electrical engineer to run an NGO for rescuing children from forced
labour and trafficking, and 17-year-old Malala, who survived a
near-fatal Taliban attack two years ago with determination advocating
education for girls, were named by the Nobel Peace Prize Committee for
the prestigious award on October 10.
They received the Nobel medal which is 18-carat green gold plated with 24-carat gold and weighs around 175 grams.
They will share USD 1.1 million prize money.
Noting that violence and repression cannot be
justified in any religion, Jagland said Islam, Christianity, Judaism,
Hinduism and Buddhism protect life and cannot be used to take lives.
“The two whom we honour here today stand very
firm on this point. They live according to a principle Mahatma Gandhi
gave expression to. He said: ‘There are many purposes I would have died
for. There are no purposes I would have killed for’,” Jagland said,
invoking Mahatma Gandhi.
Satyarthi’s NGO Bachpan Bachao Andolan (Save
Childhood Movement) prides itself on liberating over 80,000 children
from bonded labour in factories and workshops across India.
According to the International Labour
Organisation (ILO) there are about 168 million child labourers globally.
There are roughly 60 million child labourers in India alone.
Malala, who was nominated in the peace prize
category last year also, had displayed tremendous courage even after the
Taliban attack when she resolutely expressed her determination to carry
on with her campaign for child rights and girls education especially in
a country like Pakistan. — PTI