Swedish doctor returns Nobel Prize for Peter Handkes

The award of the Nobel Prize for letter to Austrian writer Peter Handke has sparked numerous controversy in public opinion about his support for Slobodan Milosevic's regime during the wars in the former Yugoslavia, and protests were organised on the occasion of this award. For this, Swedish physician Christina Doctare turns the Nobel Prize won [...]
For this, Swedish doctor Christina Doctare takes back the Nobel Prize won in 1988 because of Handkes.
The ceremony was followed by a boycott by Croatia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Kosovo, northern Macedonia, Albania and Turkey. The spontaneous protests, ahead of the official separation ceremony, were held before the Potocari Memorial Centre in Srebrenica, and later in the Swedish capital, Stockholm.
Meeting in a minute of silence in honour of Srebrenica genocide victims in the summer of 1995 and victims of hostilities throughout Bosnia and Herzegovina, writes Al Jazeera forwards Klan Kosova.
Doctar recalled the Balkan wars, of which he reported and showed the crimes that have occurred. She talked about the massacred and fallen bodies and the horrors she witnessed.
As long as I live, I will prove that the truth of a terrible war would never be balanced,” she added.











