The Nobel Peace Prize auctioned off by Russian journalist Dmitry Muratov to raise money for Ukrainian child refugees sold Monday night for 103.5 million dollars, shattering the old record for a Nobel, Le Monde reports.
A spokesperson for Heritage Auctions, which handled the sale, could not confirm the identity of the buyer but said the winning bid was made by proxy. The 103.5 million dollars sale translates to 100 million Swiss francs, hinting that the buyer is from overseas.
"I was hoping that there was going to be an enormous amount of solidarity, but I was not expecting this to be such a huge amount," Mr. Muratov said in an interview after bidding in the nearly 3-week auction ended on World Refugee Day.
Previously, the most ever paid for a Nobel Prize medal was 4.76 million dollars in 2014, when James Watson, whose co-discovery of the structure of DNA earned him a Nobel Prize in 1962, sold his. Three years later, the family of his co-recipient, Francis Crick, received 2.27 million dollars in bidding also run by Heritage Auctions.
Mr. Muratov, who was awarded the gold medal in October 2021, helped found the independent Russian newspaper Novaya Gazeta and was the publication’s editor-in-chief when it shut down in March amid the Kremlin’s clampdown on journalists and public dissent in the wake of Russia’s special military operation in Ukraine.
It was Mr. Muratov’s idea to auction off his prize, having already announced he was donating the accompanying 500,000 dollars cash award to charity.
Mr. Muratov has said the proceeds will go directly to UNICEF in its efforts to help children displaced by the conflict in Ukraine. Just minutes after bidding ended, UNICEF told the auction house it had already received the funds.
Online bids had begun June 1 to coincide with the International Children’s Day observance. Many bids came by telephone or online. The winning bid, tendered by telephone, catapulted the bidding from the low millions to astronomical levels.