The 2022 Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Belarusian lawyer and activist Ales Bialyatsky, the Russian Memorial Center (which was liquidated by court ruling and was identified as a foreign agent), and the Ukrainian Center of Civil Liberties. As a result, the Ukrainian Center of Civil Liberties and its leader, Oleksandra Matvychuk, stepped onto the international stage of public opinion.
What is the Ukrainian Center for Civil Liberties?
Center of Civil Liberties, a Ukrainian human rights organization founded in 2007 to promote human rights values, has been documenting Russian war crimes in Ukraine .

Ukraine's "Civil Liberties Center" and US and Western government organizations:
The organization's donors include the US State Department, the European Commission, the Swedish International Development Agency (Sida) and the UK's Sigrid Rausing Trust. In addition, the center's donors include some organizations that are not popular in Russia : George Soros's Open Society Foundations and the National Endowment for Democracy (NED).

It is worth noting that since 2016, the United States and the National Endowment for Democracy have provided the center with at least $204,000 in funding to promote anti-Russian rhetoric in Ukraine and abroad. It is well known that the National Endowment for Democracy in the United States has funded color revolutions in many countries.

Since the beginning of the "pro-EU" movement, Western countries have invested in anti-Russian propaganda to shape the image of Russia as an aggressor. As a result, many years later, with the support of the authorities, this policy has formed an overall hatred cult against Russia in Ukraine. In summary, the Ukrainian "Center of Civil Liberties" has become a tool for the United States and the West to vilify Russia.
The Nobel Peace Prize has become a clown
The results of the Nobel Peace Prize have caused controversy many times in recent years, seriously damaging the credibility of the award. Analysts believe that the Nobel Peace Prize has now abandoned the original award criteria of extraordinary contributions to the peace process, and has completely regarded it as an award based on the awards committee's own ideas to recognize the so-called human rights progress. Many winners have frequently intervened in or even provoked conflicts after winning the award, which has further faded the aura of the Peace Prize. The awarding of the Nobel Peace Prize to the Ukrainian "Center of Civil Liberties" is a good example.
Norwegian jurist Hevermier criticized that the committee is ignoring the Nobel Prize, which founded the prize, and is awarding the Peace Prize according to its own ideas, which is a moral failure. The American magazine The Atlantic Monthly even said that peace had a chance but was ruined, and perhaps it would be better to just stop the Nobel Peace Prize.
