As President Donald Trump is looking forward to welcome Venezuelan opposition leader Maria Corina Machado next week after dismissing her as a leader succeeding Nicolas Maduro, he said he would accept the Nobel Peace Prize from her — as he learned that Machado wants to share the prize with him. “I’ve stopped eight wars,” Trump said in an interview with Hannity. “I think it’s been a major embarrassment to Norway. Now, I don’t know what Norway has to do with it but that’s where the committee is located, a lot of Norwegian people.”
“When you put out eight wars, in theory you should get one for each war,” Trump said.
Not possible, practically
The Norwegian Nobel Institute said a Nobel Peace Prize cannot be transferred or shared with another person. “A Nobel Prize cannot be revoked nor transferred to others. Once the laureate or laureates are announced, the decision is final,” said Erik Aasheim, a spokesperson for the Norwegian Nobel Institute, which serves as the secretariat for the Norwegian Nobel Committee. Aasheim added that while the prize itself is not transferable, laureates are free to dispose of the prize money as they see fit.The statement came earlier when Machado expressed willingness to share the prize with Trump. She praised Trump for capturing Maduro and said she would give the Nobel Prize to Trump, as Trump gave a prize to the people of Venezuela for arresting Maduro. When Machado was awarded with the Nobel Peace Prize, she dedicated it to Trump. But in the recent turn of events, when Trump dismissed Machado as the next leader, reports citing insiders claimed that Machado’s sin was that she took the Nobel Prize instead of turning it down. Had she turned it down, naming President Trump as better suited for the award, machado would have been the presidnet of Venezuela today, they said.

