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The visa ban on Dalai Lama halted indefinitely the Nobel Peace Prize conference in Johannesburg. Photo by BGNES
The Nobel Peace Prize recipients' conference in South Africa has been postponed indefinitely, BBC reports Tuesday citing local organizers.
The meeting, scheduled to be held in Johannesburg, was largely linked to the 2010 Football World Cup, which South Africa will host.
A storm of controversy erupted after Pretoria refused the Dalai Lama a visa to attend the conference.
The Dalai Lama's fellow Peace laureate, Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former South African President FW de Klerk withdrew their participation in the meeting in sign of protest. De Klerk said that the decision to refuse the visa made a "mockery" of the peace conference.
Despite the scandal surrounding the decision, government spokesman Thabo Masebe confirmed that no visa would be issued "between now and the World Cup," adding that the move did not amount to a ban. Masebe told the BBC that no other government had forced the decision on South Africa in order to refute rumors about Chinese influence.
The visa had been declined because the Dalai Lama's presence "would not be in the best interests of South Africa at this time", he said.
A representative of the Dalai Lama said he was not surprised by the decision. The Tibetan government in exile thinks that China has pressured many countries to refuse a visit by the Dalai Lama, according to Chhime Chhoekyapa, an aide in Dharamsala, India.
The Dalai Lama fled China in 1959 after a failed uprising against Chinese rule.
In addition to Tutu and De Klerk, laureates Nelson Mandela, and Martti Ahtisaar, Seff Blatter, President of FIFA, and actress Charlize Theron were invited to attend. The event had the blessing of the Nobel Prize Committee.
The Bulgarian Ministry of Interior has assigned security to European Prosecutor Teodora Georgieva after she reported pressure and threats linked to investigations conducted by the European Public Prosecutor’s Office in Bulgaria
Germany has warned that the war involving Iran could trigger a new migration wave toward Europe, as the conflict continues to create instability across the region
The European Union and Hungarian opposition figures have sharply criticized Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky over recent comments directed at Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban, describing them as a threat
The Ministry of Justice has officially received a report from Teodora Georgieva, Bulgaria's European Prosecutor, detailing pressure, threats, and attempts to undermine the authority of the European Public Prosecutor’s Office
NATO has stepped up the readiness of its missile defense systems following an Iranian ballistic missile attack targeting Turkey, a spokesperson for the Alliance’s military headquarters in Mons, Belgium, Martin L. O'Donnell, confirmed to DPA.
The ongoing conflict in the Middle East is expected to have immediate implications for the security of the European Union, according to the European policing agency Europol
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