Heritage Auctions tweeted that Muratov “auctioned his 2021 #NobelPeacePrize to profit UNICEF’s little one refugee fund. It offered for $103,500,000.”
All of the proceeds from the public sale, which concluded on World Refugee Day, will go to UNICEF’s humanitarian response for Ukrainian ​youngsters displaced by warfare, in accordance with the public sale home.
In response to Heritage Auctions​’ description of the medal up on the market, Norwegian Nobel Institute director Olav Njølstad supported the public sale, calling ​it a “beneficiant act of humanitarianism.”
Newest figures present there have been greater than 7.7 million border crossings from Ukraine, ​with greater than 5 million refugees from Ukraine recorded throughout Europe ​since Russia’s invasion in late February, in accordance with the UN refugee company, UNHCR.
​In an enchantment for donations, UNICEF ​says that the 7.5 million youngsters of Ukraine have been deeply affected by the continued battle, together with being separated from household, missing fundamental provides and assets, and going through the every day menace of explosives.

Nobel Peace Prize winners Dmitry Muratov from Russia, proper, and Maria Ressa of the Philippines obtain their awards throughout the Nobel Peace Prize ceremony at Oslo Metropolis Corridor, Norway, in December 2021. Credit score: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
Heritage Auctions​’ description continued: “The purpose is to make use of this occasion to foster consciousness of refugee crises and for the giving to proceed lengthy after the public sale on June twentieth.”
Russia’s media crackdown
Muratov shared the 2021 Nobel with Philippine-American journalist Maria Ressa for what judges described as their “efforts to safeguard freedom of expression.”
Muratov is the editor-in-chief of unbiased Russian information outlet Novaya Gazeta. He ​”criticised Russia’s annexation of Crimea in 2014 and the federal government’s use of army pressure, each in and outdoors Russia,​” in accordance with the Nobel Peace Prize group.
Six of the newspaper’s journalists have been murdered together with Anna Politkovskaya, a strident critic of the Kremlin who reported on human rights abuses in Chechnya.
The Kremlin has tightened its grip on the nation’s unbiased media following the invasion of Ukraine. In March, lawmakers criminalized the unfold of “faux” data that discredits the Russian armed forces or requires sanctions in opposition to the nation.
The crackdown has compelled some shops to close up store and their journalists to depart the nation.