(New York) Dmitry Muratov, Russian editor of the independent investigative newspaper Novaya Gazetaauctioned off his Nobel Peace Prize medal for $103.5 million on Monday, to benefit children displaced by conflict in Ukraine.
Updated yesterday at 8:20 p.m.
Proceeds from the New York sale, won by an unnamed telephone bidder, will be donated to UNICEF’s program for Ukrainian children displaced by war, according to Heritage Auctions, which is in charge of the sale.
When the final offer fell, increased by tens of millions of dollars over the previous one, the room was taken aback, including Mr. Muratov himself. “I’m like you in that regard,” he told AFP, speaking through a translator after the sale.
On his choice of UNICEF as the recipient of the funds, he replied: “It is essential for us that this organization does not belong to any government. It can work above governments. There are no borders for her”.
Mr Muratov had won the prestigious prize in 2021, alongside Filipino journalist Maria Ressa, with the committee honoring them “for their efforts to preserve freedom of expression”.
The newspaper Novaya Gazeta announced at the end of March that it was suspending its online and print publications in Russia until the end of the intervention in Ukraine, in full hardening of the Kremlin against dissonant voices.
Dmitry Muratov was part of a group of journalists who founded Novaya Gazeta in 1993 after the fall of the Soviet Union. Before the suspension of its operations, the newspaper was the last to voice criticism of Russian President Vladimir Putin.
Novaya Gazeta is particularly known for his investigations into corruption and human rights abuses in Chechnya.
This commitment has cost the lives of six of his collaborators since the 1990s, including the famous journalist Anna Politkovskaïa, assassinated in 2006. Dmitry Muratov dedicated his Nobel Prize to their memory.
“This newspaper is dangerous for people’s lives,” he told AFP in 2021.
In a video posted by Heritage Auctions, the journalist says that winning the Nobel Prize “gives you an opportunity to be heard”.
“The most important message today is that people understand that a conflict is happening and that we must help the people who are suffering the most”, he added, referring in particular to “children in refugee families.
In early April, Dmitry Muratov was attacked on a train in Russia by an unknown person who sprayed him with a red mixture of oil paint and acetone, causing burns to his eyes.