Reuters |
Dhaka: Mohammad Younus, banker to the poor and 2006 Nobel Peace Prize winner, returned to a hero's welcome in the Bangladesh capital yesterday after a visit to Norway to pick up the award. Younus and the Grameen Bank he founded were cited for their work to lift millions out of poverty by giving loans to the desperately poor, especially women in rural Bangladesh. The award, announced earlier in the year, was welcome news in the impoverished South Asian nation which gets regularly hit by nature's fury - droughts, cyclones and floods. Younus left an airport reception perched on the back of a lorry and waved to the thousands of cheering well-wishers, television showed. Younus and Grameen Bank representative Mosammat Taslima Begum received gold medals and diplomas from the Nobel Committee at a ceremony in Oslo on December 10. The prize created by the Swedish philanthropist and inventor of dynamite Alfred Nobel comes with a cheque for 10 million Swedish crowns (Dh5.4 million), to be shared by the winners. "We must work hard in all sectors including politics to keep up the image that we have created by achieving the Nobel Peace Prize," Younus told a news conference yesterday. |
There are many stellar people in this world, some still with us, some not, who have made a valuable contribution to our world.
Tuesday, December 19, 2006
Nobel Peace prize winner returns to hero's welcome
Mohammad Younus is a real hero. I'm thrilled he was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. His work not only help people, it helps them help themselves.
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