The president of Equatorial Guinea has issued a rare public statement to defend a UNESCO prize bearing his name that a human rights group said was merely a way to “launder the reputation of a brutal dictator.”
The US$300,000 UNESCO-Obiang Nguema Mbasogo International Prize for Research in the Life Sciences has put the UN’s cultural agency under the spotlight and prompted rights groups to ask the agency and its member states to scrap the award funded by Guinean President Teodoro Obiang Nguema’s foundation.
Obiang seized power in Equatorial Guinea more than 30 years ago. The most recent human rights report from the US State Department documented unlawful killings by security forces, torture, arbitrary arrests and severe restrictions on free speech and the press.
Despite his country’s vast oil wealth and a GDP per capita larger than that of the UK, France or Japan, most Equatorial Guineans live in grinding poverty.
Critics have called the prize — for research aimed at “improving quality of life” — the height of hypocrisy for a country that has seen its infant mortality rate rise and its school enrollment decline in the past decade. The prize is scheduled to be given this year for the first time, though no firm date has been set.
Obiang has defended the prize — established in 2008 with a US$3 million fund — saying that the international community simply does not want to support a prize in his name.
“The opposition to this prize is not because the award is not positive, it’s simply because the international community does not want to advocate on behalf of President Obiang Nguema of Equatorial Guinea,” he said in a statement on Monday.
UNESCO spokeswoman Susan Williams said that while the agency is aware of the criticisms, any decision to suspend the prize rests with the executive board, made up of member states, including the US and several EU countries.
“We’re concerned over criticisms of the prize,” Williams said. “We’ve passed them on to the board and it’s up to UNESCO’s member states to react.”
The next meeting of the board is on Tuesday next week, but Williams stressed that no decision could be made then, though the prize would be discussed.
“We’re shocked that UNESCO signed up for the prize in first place,” said Robert Palmer, a campaigner for the human rights and anti-corruption group Global Witness.
He speculated that diplomats with the body didn’t want to cause a stir by refusing the offer from Obiang. He said he was afraid they would sit by quietly again.
“Any country that does not stand up is going to be complicit in UNESCO’s laundering the reputation of a brutal dictator,” Palmer said.
Lisa Misol, a researcher with Human Rights Watch, called the controversy a test for the UN body, where UNESCO director-general Irina Bokova’s leadership has been billed as a new age of reform after the agency took heat for honoring Uzbek President Islam Karimov in 2006. Karimov had been ostracized by the West after a brutal suppression of a revolt in his country’s east just months earlier.
Misol said the US$3 million would be better spent inside Equatorial Guinea.
“Advancing sciences is a worthy cause, but not at the expense of people who are not able to benefit from their country’s oil wealth,” Misol said.
The US embassy in Equatorial Guinea declined to comment.
UNESCO administers the US$3 million fund and is charged with awarding the prize money each year to up to three scientists. The prize will come up for review in five years if it is not scuttled beforehand.
Activists have also raised questions about the provenance of the money. A French investigation has turned up numerous French assets linked to Obiang that rights groups say were paid for with funds stolen from government coffers. A US Senate report this year accused Obiang’s son of moving US$110 million in suspect funds into the US.
Paris, where UNESCO is based, hosted a conference on Tuesday on how to fight just what Obiang is accused of — hiding stolen assets in “safe havens.”
Bankers and government officials at the conference did not want to discuss Obiang’s riches publicly and some visibly squirmed when asked about it.
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