Cuban ex President Fidel Castro had been proposed once for the Nobel Peace Prize by Norwegian parliamentarian Hallgeir Langeland in 2001. To joining this petition send an email to fidelnobeldelapaz@gmail.com with your first and last name, profession or occupation, organization and nationality. (Photo cubadebate.cu/Seinforma)
He was directly responsible for setting up the International School of Medicine in Havana which graduated more than 20,000 students from more than one hundred countries. Another reason is his commitment to a safer, more stable world in which sustainable development is practiced by governments worldwide.
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Fidel Castro Proposed to
Nobel Peace Prize 2010
"Immigrants in Europe live in
lowest level of society”
Havana. - An on-line petition has been started to propose the historic Leader of the Cuban Revolution, Fidel Castro, as a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize in 2010 in recognition of the social, cultural, human rights, and political movements developed during his 47 years as president. Under his leadership the achievements in health and education became the model for other Latin American countries to aspire to such as cutting the infant mortality rate to six in every thousand live births and a nearly 100% attendance in primary, secondary and third level education
These developments not only benefited the Cuban people but millions of other Latin Americans under the many international missions set up by Fidel in spite of the blockade against Cuba running for the 47 years he was in power.
He was directly responsible for setting up the International School of Medicine in Havana which graduated more than 20,000 students from more than one hundred countries. Four million people around the world have learnt to read using the Cuban method “Yes, I can”. Most of the beneficiaries of these projects were poor people directly suffering because of the unequal distribution of their countries wealth by industrialists, bankers and corrupt governments.
Meanwhile other governments, including former winners of the peace prize, were dedicated to sending in their marines and missiles to protect their mercenary interests around the third world by exploiting the natural and human resources.
There are many more reasons why Fidel Castro is qualified to be considered as a candidate for the Nobel peace prize in 2010. One of the most important is his commitment to a safer, more stable world in which sustainable development is practiced by governments worldwide and the poor of the earth benefit from their country’s natural wealth.