Confucius Peace Prize

Confucius Peace Prize
Awarded forPromotion of world peace from an Eastern, Confucian perspective
DateDecember 9, 2010 (2010-12-09)
CountryPeople's Republic of China
Presented byPrivate committee
First award2010
Final award2017
Confucius Peace Prize
Traditional Chinese孔子和平獎
Simplified Chinese孔子和平奖
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu PinyinKǒngzǐ Hépíngjiǎng
Wade–GilesK'ung3-tzu3 He2-p'ing2-chiang3
Yue: Cantonese
Yale RomanizationKung3 Dz3 He2ping2jyang2
JyutpingHung2 Zi2 Wo4 peng4 zoeng2
Southern Min
Hokkien POJKhóng-chú Hô-pêng Chióng

The Confucius Peace Prize (simplified Chinese: 孔子和平奖; traditional Chinese: 孔子和平獎; pinyin: Kǒngzǐ Hépíngjiǎng) was a Chinese alternative to the Nobel Peace Prize established in 2010 by the Association of Chinese Indigenous Arts in the People's Republic of China (PRC). The prize was created in response to a proposal by businessman Liu Zhiqin that criticized the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize, which was awarded to Chinese dissident Liu Xiaobo. The chairman of the committee said that the award existed to "promote world peace from an Eastern perspective", and Confucian peace specifically. The original cash prize given to the winner in 2010 was ¥100,000 RMB (US$15,000).

Despite an attempt by China's Ministry of Culture to ban the prize in September 2011, the original organizers re-established in Hong Kong as the "China International Peace Research Center", awarding the prize to Vladimir Putin in November 2011, to Kofi Annan and Yuan Longping in 2012, to Fidel Castro in 2014, to Robert Mugabe in 2015, and Hun Sen in 2017. The Chinese government has denied having any connections with the prize. The Prize Committee has been disbanded since 2018.