The EU has
been a key in transforming Europe "from a continent of wars to a continent
of peace," Committee chairman Thorbjoern Jagland said in announcing the
award in Oslo.
"This
is a message to Europe to do everything they can to secure what they've
achieved and move forward," Jagland said, saying it was a reminder of what
would be lost "if the union is allowed to collapse".
He praised
the 27-nation EU for rebuilding after World War Two and for its role in
spreading stability after the 1989 fall of the Berlin Wall.
The prize,
worth $1.2 million, will be presented in Oslo on December 10. The decision by
the five-member panel, led by Jagland who is also Secretary-General of the
Council of Europe, was unanimous.
The EU won
from a field of 231 candidates including Russian dissidents and religious
leaders working for Muslim-Christian reconciliation.
But the EU
is mired in crisis with strains on the euro, the common currency shared by 17
nations. The prize was a surprise given the EU's current woes.
And many
Norwegians are bitterly opposed to the EU, seeing it as a threat to the
sovereignty of nation states. "I find this absurd," the leader of
Norway's anti-EU membership organization Heming Olaussen told NRK.
"In
Latin America and other parts of the world they will view this quite
differently than they will from Brussels. The union is a trade bloc that
contributes to keeping many countries in poverty."
Norway,
the home of the peace prize, has voted "no" twice to joining the EU,
in 1972 and 1994. The country has prospered outside the EU, partly thanks to
huge oil and gas resources.
The
five-member committee is appointed by parliament, where parties are deeply
split over EU membership. Jagland has long favored EU membership.
Janne
Haaland Matlary, Professor of International Politics at the Oslo University,
who has twice nominated the EU for the prize, praised the award.
"The
European Union has been the most effective creator of peace in the world since
its inception with the coal and steel union in the 1950s," she told
Reuters. "Today it is unthinkable with military conflict between members
in the EU."
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