Oslo Center
The Oslo Centre for Peace and Human Rights, or simply Oslo Center, is a nongovernmental organization founded by former Norwegian prime minister Kjell Magne Bondevik in January 2006. The purpose of the center is to work for world peace, human rights and inter-religious tolerance worldwide.
Shortly after the announced opening of The Oslo Center, Bondevik told Norwegian newspaper Aftenposten, that the center would focus primarily on negotiations between governments and take on the role as a peace mediator in conflict areas around the world. He also said that the center would work closely with western governments and international human rights organizations and take advantage of the vast political networks that its members, all former politicians and bureaucrats, had built up over the years.
In 2022, the center had lost the majority of its donors and was forced to close its operations in Oslo. Operations were shifted to Nairobi, Kenya and as of 2024, the center's main donor was the Muslim World Foundation, an organization with close ties to the Saudi Arabian regime.
Projects
- Burma:
- *Bondevik co-authored the book prisoners in our own country about human rights abuse in Burma
- North Korea, failure to protect:
- *Commissioning a study of the present humanitarian situation in North Korea
- Club de Madrid:
- *An organization dedicated to democracy around the world
- Inter-culture and inter-religious dialogue:
- *working for inter-religious dialogue
- New born's right to life:
- *organization working for the rights of children*
- The right to life and the present situation in the Horn of Africa:
- *organization working in the Horn of Africa
- Health and human rights:
- *Mapping out religious health assets that can be mobilized in the battle against AIDS/HIV in sub-Saharan Africa
Criticism of funding sources
In 2022, the Norwegian newspaper Vårt Land disclosed that Bondevik had received an undisclosed amount to write a favorable op-ed piece in their pages earlier in 2022, praising the government of Kazakhstan. This drew ire due to the increasingly authoritarian handling of protests in Kazakhstan that same year.
Criticism of nepotism
received criticism from both political commentators and newspapers when he informed the media about the new center. The recurring theme in this criticism was that Bondevik was using his political status to gain an unfair advantage for himself and his new center. Some commentators also felt that it was inappropriate for a recently retired prime minister to accept large sums of money from both the Government and the Norwegian business community, which up until that moment had benefitted from his politics. This was viewed by some as nepotism.Bondevik was also criticized for selecting President of the Norwegian Parliament, Thorbjørn Jagland, as chairman of the board for the new center. Jagland, also received massive criticism for allowing Bondevik, a retired politician, to announce the opening of the centre in Jagland's Parliament office. Some felt that this raised serious doubts as to whether this was a private peace center, or whether it was under the auspices of the Norwegian Government.