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NOBEL PEACE PRIZE

Gratitude and laughs as Suu Kyi meets Bono

She wore red roses in her hair, he donned his huge orange sunglasses -- Burma's democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday met one of her biggest fans, U2 frontman and activist rock star Bono.

Gratitude and laughs as Suu Kyi meets Bono
Norway foreign minister, Jonas Gahr Støre, joins Aung San Suu Kyi and Bono at an Oslo press conference on Monday (Photo: Lise Åserud/Scanpix)

"I'm star-struck," admitted the Irish singer, who has long supported her freedom struggle and dedicated the song "Walk On" to her, when they met at a peace forum in Oslo, Suu Kyi's latest stop on a five-nation Europe tour.

Nobel Peace Prize laureate Suu Kyi has herself received superstar treatment and been cheered by crowds of many thousands as she visited Norway on herb first Europe trip in a quarter-century after years of house arrest.

Long isolated, threatened and vilified by one of the world's must repressive dictatorships, she has recently rejoined mainstream politics in a changing country, while many of her party members have been freed from prison.

On Monday, Suu Kyi hosted a panel with Bono, who has long used his star power to promote rights and fight poverty, and who recalled a global U2 concert tour where video messages from Suu Kyi were played from giant screens.

"Suu Kyi came on the road with us," the stubble-faced rocker quipped at their joint press conference. "Seven million people we played to. She was there every night. A digital version, but she's very good live!

"And she made a real connection with our audience… telling them that their voices were powerful and that they could be heard all the way to Burma."

Bono recalled that at the shows, not everyone in the crowd knew who was behind the initials for the name Aung San Suu Kyi.

"We had a few people who would arrive with a T-shirt with 'ASSK' on and think she's a speed metal band from Asia," he joked. "It's great that in a U2 crowd not everyone is a political science student."

On a more serious note, he spoke of his admiration for Suu Kyi: "It's really her non-violent position that I find so impressive.

"You get the feeling with Daw Suu that peace is not the absence of war around us but rather peace is the absence of war within us," he said, using a Burmese honorific that means 'aunt' for Suu Kyi.

When Suu Kyi was asked whether she liked Bono's song about her and her family's struggle, Bono interjected: "She's a Bob Marley fan… So am I."

But Suu Kyi was quick to praise his work: "I like the song because it's very close to how I feel, that it's up to you to carry on.

"It's good if you have supporters. It's good if you have people who are sympathetic and understanding. But in the end, it's your own two legs that have to carry you on."

A thankful Bono replied about the song that "I'm amazed that this has been taken to her heart and the hearts of others."

Then he added on a lighter note: "You never know. If the song was shite, it could have made matters a lot worse."

Suu Kyi, speaking earlier on the need to fight injustices and help people, paid her own compliment to Bono.

"I think there is always something that can be done, and we need people like you to do that. We need people like Bono. We must have Bono in on it!"

Bono was later on Monday expected to give Suu Kyi a lift aboard his private jet to Dublin, where she will be feted at the "Electric Burma" tribute concert hosted by Amnesty International.

Later around 5,000 people were due at a public event to sing "happy birthday" to Suu Kyi, who turns 67 on Tuesday in her former family home Britain, the next stop of her whirlwind Europe visit.

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RACISM

Norwegian MP proposes Black Lives Matter for Nobel Peace Prize

Norwegian MP Petter Eide has nominated Black Lives Matter for the Nobel Peace Prize, reportedly stating that the movement had "forced countries other than the US to face up to racism within their own societies."

Norwegian MP proposes Black Lives Matter for Nobel Peace Prize
A Black Lives Matter demonstration in Oslo, 2016. Photo: Torstein Bøe / NTB/ TT

“I find that one of the key challenges we have seen in America, but also in Europe and Asia, is the kind of increasing conflict based on inequality,” Mr Eide said in his nomination papers, according to The Guardian.  

“Black Lives Matter has become a very important worldwide movement to fight racial injustice. They have had a tremendous achievement in raising global awareness and consciousness about racial injustice,” he added.

Founded in the United States in 2013, the Black Lives Matter movement gained momentum in May 2020 after George Floyd died. A white policeman had knelt on Floyd’s neck for eight minutes ignoring Floyd’s pleas that he couldn’t breathe.

The incident fuelled protests in the United States that sped across the world.

“This movement has become one of the strongest global movements for working with racial injustice,” Petter Eide, told AFP.

“They have also been spread to many many countries, building up… awareness on the importance of fighting racial injustice,” he said.

Tens of thousands of people, including MPs and ministers from all countries, former Nobel laureates and distinguished academics, can propose candidates for the various Nobel prizes. The deadline ends on Sunday.

The Nobel prizes will be announced at the start of October. 

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