Venezuelan Nobel peace prize winner will not attend ceremony, say organisers

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The Venezuelan opposition leader María Corina Machado will not attend the Nobel peace prize ceremony and the award will be accepted by her daughter, organisers have said.

Machado has been seen only once in public since going into hiding in August last year amid a tense showdown with the president, Nicolás Maduro. Venezuela’s attorney general has said Machado, 58, would be considered a “fugitive” if she left the country to accept the award.

It was unclear in the hours before the ceremony on Wednesday whether or not Machado was in Norway for the event – due to start at 1pm (1200 GMT) – but the Nobel Institute spokesperson Erik Aasheim finally confirmed that she would not be there.

“It will be her daughter Ana Corina Machado who will receive the prize in her mother’s name,” the Nobel Institute director, Kristian Berg Harpviken, told Norway’s NRK radio. “Her daughter will give the speech that María Corina herself wrote.”

Harpviken said he did not know where Machado was.

Her mother and three daughters, along with some Latin American heads of state, including the Argentine president, Javier Milei, are in Oslo for the prize-giving at Oslo’s City Hall.

While organisers said Machado had previously indicated she would attend, suspicions were raised when a traditional press conference with the award winner on Tuesday was postponed and then cancelled.

Machado has accused Maduro of stealing Venezuela’s July 2024 election, from which she was banned. Her claim is backed by much of the international community.

The Oslo ceremony coincides with a large US military build-up in the Caribbean in recent weeks and deadly strikes on what Washington says are drug smuggling boats. Maduro has said the goal of the US operations – which Machado has said are justified – is to topple the government and seize Venezuela’s oil reserves.

Since going into hiding, Machado’s only public appearance was on 9 January in Caracas where she protested against Maduro’s inauguration for his third term. The opposition claimed its candidate, Edmundo González Urrutia, won the election. He now lives in exile, and was in Oslo on Wednesday.

Machado was awarded the Nobel peace prize on 10 October for her efforts to bring democracy to Venezuela, challenging Maduro’s iron-fisted rule since 2013.

Venezuela’s attorney general, Tarek William Saab, said last month the opposition leader would be considered a fugitive if she travelled to Norway to accept the prize. “By being outside Venezuela and having numerous criminal investigations, she is considered a fugitive,” said Saab, adding that she was accused of “acts of conspiracy, incitement of hatred, terrorism”.

Harpviken said this week: “It has happened multiple times in the history of the peace prize that the laureate has been prevented from attending the ceremony and on those occasions it’s always been the case that close family members of the laureate will receive the prize and give the lecture in the place of the laureate.”

Doubts had been raised about how Machado would return to Venezuela.

Benedicte Bull, a professor specialised in Latin America at the University of Oslo, said: “She risks being arrested if she returns even if the authorities have shown more restraint with her than with many others, because arresting her would have a very strong symbolic value.”

On the other hand, “she is the undisputed leader of the opposition, but if she were to stay away in exile for a long time, I think that would change and she would gradually lose political influence”, Bull added.

While Machado has been hailed by many for her efforts to bring democracy to Venezuela, she has also been criticised by others for aligning herself with the US president, Donald Trump, to whom she has dedicated her Nobel prize.

The Nobel laureates in medicine, physics, chemistry, literature and economics will receive their prizes at a separate ceremony in Stockholm on Wednesday.

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