- 'People will come back': Kazakhstan debates nuclear future
- 'They even murder children': Burkinabes caught in conflict crossfire
- Carpe diem: the Costa Rican women turning fish into fashion
- Senegal looks to aquaculture as fish stocks dwindle
- Deadly strike on central Beirut after Israel, Iran trade threats
- Will AI one day win a Nobel Prize?
- Conte plays down Napoli's title chances
- Tolstoy's descendants in family saga over Russian peace prize
- Climate change, economics muddy West's drive to curb Chinese EVs
- Tigers, Royals, Padres advance in MLB playoffs, Brewers stay alive
- Argentina's Milei vetoes university budget after huge protests
- Singapore ex-minister sentenced to 12 months in prison in rare graft trial
- Baseball 'superhuman' Ohtani finds new ways to amaze among greats
- TotalEnergies plans to grow oil and gas production until 2030
- 2024 Nobels offer glimmer of hope as global crises mount
- Tokyo rallies on weak yen, Hong Kong reverses after surge
- Australia's world No.7 Green wants women to play Presidents Cup
- Mexico leader worried about drinking water after Hurricane John
- Tunisia readies for vote as incumbent Saied eyes victory
- Messi scores two as Miami clinch MLS Supporters' Shield
- US election like no other enters nail-biting final month
- Morocco mobile desalination units quench remote areas' thirst
- US election: five key moments in an extraordinary campaign
- High childcare costs in US weigh on women's employment
- US voters seek help with crushing childcare costs
- Taiwan shuts down for second day as Typhoon Krathon to land
- Chappell Roan drama sees US singer's fandom get political -- and pushy
- Supercharged storms: how climate change amplifies cyclones
- Biden official urges talks as US port strike enters second day
- Huge protests in Argentina over public university cuts
- Deadly Israeli strike on central Beirut after soldiers killed
- Trump 'resorted to crimes' to overturn 2020 election: special counsel
- Tigers and Royals complete sweeps to advance in MLB playoffs
- 'Heartbreaking': Biden, Harris tour storm areas as deaths surpass 160
- Australia's most capped footballer Polkinghorne to retire
- Emery masterminds 'statement' Champions League win for Aston Villa
- Ancelotti holds hands up as Real Madrid's long unbeaten run ends
- Juventus played like a team 'possessed', says Vlahovic
- Real Madrid beaten in Champions League as Villa shock Bayern
- US urgently tries to shape Israel's response to Iran
- Tigers sweep Astros to advance in MLB playoffs
- Dodgers say pitching icon Valenzuela 'focusing on health'
- Rampant Benfica smash Simeone's Atletico in Champions League
- Conceicao stunner nets 10-man Juventus win at Leipzig
- Aston Villa stun Bayern in repeat of 1982 European Cup final
- Rally in oil prices loses steam on mixed day for global stocks
- Rampant Benfica smash Simeone's absent Atletico
- David strikes as Lille claim Real Madrid scalp in Champions League
- Slot makes Liverpool history as Reds beat Bologna
- Biden, Harris tour areas slammed by major storm
RBGPF | 100% | 59.99 | $ | |
CMSC | 0.04% | 24.78 | $ | |
NGG | -1.85% | 68.78 | $ | |
GSK | -2.15% | 39.45 | $ | |
BTI | -1.33% | 35.97 | $ | |
RIO | -0.48% | 70.82 | $ | |
RYCEF | 0.14% | 6.91 | $ | |
RELX | -0.11% | 47.29 | $ | |
BP | 0.86% | 32.37 | $ | |
CMSD | -0.04% | 24.93 | $ | |
SCS | -2.56% | 12.87 | $ | |
VOD | -2.16% | 9.74 | $ | |
JRI | -1.12% | 13.38 | $ | |
BCC | -1.33% | 139.53 | $ | |
AZN | 1.14% | 79.58 | $ | |
BCE | -1.13% | 34.44 | $ |
Tolstoy's descendants in family saga over Russian peace prize
A new peace prize backed by Russian President Vladimir Putin bearing Leo Tolstoy's name has divided the writer's descendants, bringing to mind the unhappy families of his novel "Anna Karenina".
At the famed Bolshoi Theatre in Moscow, the first Leo Tolstoy International Peace Prize was awarded on September 9 to the African Union, in the presence of numerous high-profile Russians.
Leo Tolstoy "would turn and turn and turn in his grave" if he knew, "but hopefully he can't hear anything", his great-grandson Stephan Tolstoy told AFP in an interview in Stockholm.
An elegant 83-year-old Swedish national, he has been fuming ever since he found out about the initiative.
His ancestor was a fervent pacifist opposed to all forms of state and government, and who recounted his experience as a soldier during the Siege of Sevastopol in the Crimean War in 1854-1855.
"It is a peace prize. And I think it's perfect to link it to the name of Leo Tolstoy. There's nothing wrong with that," Stephan Tolstoy said.
"The problem is that it is initiated by a country at war and invading another country," he said, referring to Russia's invasion of Ukraine.
"And that makes it more complicated. A little bit disturbing," he added.
- Tool of influence -
The Tolstoy Prize helps contribute to the "formation of the new just multipolar world order", President Putin said in a statement accompanying the prize's announcement.
The selection of the African Union as its first laureate was likely a strategic choice, as Russia vies to expand its influence over the continent.
In this power struggle with the West, the Kremlin has recruited the illustrious "War and Peace" author's great-great-grandson, Vladimir Tolstoy, as a board member for the prize.
Leo Tolstoy "was always in favour of a just world", Vladimir Tolstoy told Russian state television Pervy Kanal in June.
"Tolstoy's descendants live all over the world and have supported this initiative," said the former presidential adviser on cultural affairs and head of the Tolstoy Museum in Moscow.
"No!", retorted his distant cousin in Stockholm.
"It was said that the members of the Tolstoy family were asked in advance, and certainly we were not," he said.
"Before the invasion, I had quite a good relationship with him (Vladimir Tolstoy)," said Stephan Tolstoy.
But "now we haven't had any discussions or contact since the war started, unfortunately."
In another sign of the deep split, the once-packed family reunions that Vladimir Tolstoy used to organise every two years at Leo Tolstoy's Yasnaya Polyana estate are now ancient history.
- Nobel copycats -
The Tolstoy Prize has little chance of overshadowing the most prestigious award in the field, the Nobel Peace Prize -- which Tolstoy himself was nominated for thrice.
Since it was first awarded in 1901, the Nobel, whose winners will be announced this year from October 7-14, has inspired numerous copycats, including some outright competitors.
In 1949, at the start of the Cold War, the Stalin Peace Prize -- later renamed the Lenin Peace Prize -- saw itself as an alternative to the Nobel and was presented until the Soviet Union's collapse.
Among its numerous laureates -- often subscribers to Communist ideology -- are Chilean poet Pablo Neruda, French author Louis Aragon, Spanish painter Pablo Picasso, Soviet leaders Nikita Khrushchev and Leonid Brezhnev, as well as Cuban leader Fidel Castro.
After the Nobel went to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo in 2010, a Confucius Peace Prize was also introduced in China and awarded for a few years, to Putin, Castro and Zimbabwean president Robert Mugabe, among others.
Meanwhile in Oslo, the Norwegian Nobel Institute aims to steer clear of any controversy when the Peace Prize is awarded on October 11.
"There are more than 300 peace prizes in the world and we wish all of them welcome and all the best," its director Olav Njolstad told AFP.
"We are pretty confident that the Nobel Peace Prize stands out as ... the most prestigious peace prize in the world, and that I say without any criticism of the other prizes," he added.
A.Mahlangu--AMWN