
OSLO, Norway — Finnish mediator Martti Ahtisaari accepted this year’s Nobel Peace Prize with a plea to President-elect Barack Obama: Start pressing for Middle East peace as soon as you can.
Receiving the coveted award in Oslo, the former Finnish president rejected the notion that “the Middle East knot can never be untied” and criticized world leaders — as well as the Israelis and Palestinians — for letting the violence continue.
“The international community and those in power are sitting there letting them destroy each other,” Ahtisaari, 71, said before Wednesday’s prize ceremony. “They are allowing both parties to make their lives in the future even more complicated and difficult than it is today.”
He reiterated that call in his acceptance speech, with a special message to Obama.
“I do hope that the new president of the United States, who will be sworn in next month, will give high priority to the Middle East conflict during his first year in the office,” he told dignitaries at Oslo’s City Hall.
Obama has pledged to make progress on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict a key diplomatic priority.
Ahtisaari received this year’s coveted Nobel Peace Prize for his three decades of peace work in three continents.
He was a senior Finnish diplomat when in 1977 he was named the U.N. envoy for Namibia, where guerrillas were battling South African apartheid rule. He later became undersecretary-general, and in 1988 he was dispatched to Namibia to lead 8,000 U.N. peacekeepers during its transition to independence.
After serving as Finnish president from 1994 to 2000, Ahtisaari returned to peace efforts in Kosovo and in Indonesia, where he negotiated a 2005 peace deal between the government and Aceh rebels.
Ahtisaari, who founded the mediation group Crisis Management Initiative, has not sought a role in the Middle East, saying the process was already in good hands with former British Prime Minister Tony Blair mediating.
“It’s difficult if you have too many cooks in the kitchen,” he said.
By selecting Ahtisaari for the prize, the Nobel committee returned its focus to traditional peace work after tapping former Vice President Al Gore and the U.N. panel on climate change last year.



