Robert Mugabe, Zimbabwean Dictator, Wins 'China's Nobel Peace Prize'
The 91-year-old received the Confucius trophy despite what some describe as a "brutal repression" to his people during his 35 years in power, with no clear successor.
Nine Chinese experts and scholars made the decision to award Mugabe the honour, just one month after he addressed the UN and shouted "We are not gays" before denouncing "attempts to prescribe new rights that are contrary to our values, norms, traditions, and beliefs."
Controversy has begun to surround Mugabe's win and people have flocked to Twitter to react to the announcement. Hugh Riminton, an award-winning foreign correspondent wrote: "(The Confucius Prize) has been awarded to... Robert Mugabe. Not a joke."
Others followed suit:
Mugabe is the latest in a series of critics of the West who have received the Confucius Peace Prize, first awarded in 2010 amid Beijing's anger over the granting of the Nobel Peace Prize to imprisoned Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo.
Prior recipients of the prize, which is awarded by a non-governmental committee composed mainly of scholars, include former Cuban leader Fidel Castro (2014) and Russian President Vladimir Putin (2011).
Other previous winners include Taiwanese former Chinese Nationalist Party chairman, Lien Chan (2010), Kofi Annan, former UN Secretary-General (2012), and Yi Cheng, former president of China’s Buddhist Association (2013).
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