Russia’s richest man Alisher Usmanov has bought the auctioned Nobel Prize medal of publicly-shunned American geneticist James Watson. He says he plans to return the medal to its owner.
READ MORE: ‘I am an unperson’: ‘Racist’ DNA
discoverer forced to sell Nobel Prize medal
Usmanov’s bid of $4.1 million won the medal at the auction, USM
Holdings group, of which the billionaire is the largest
shareholder, said on Tuesday.
“In my opinion, a situation in which an outstanding scientist
sells a medal recognizing his achievements is unacceptable,”
Usmanov said in the statement. “Dr. Watson’s work contributed
to cancer research, the illness from which my father died. It is
important for me that the money that I spent on this medal will
go to supporting scientific research, and the medal will stay
with the person who deserved it.”
The auction took place on December 4 at Christie’s in New York.
The medal was awarded to Watson in 1962 for discovering the
structure of DNA. However, the scientist claims he was forced to
auction off the prize after being ostracized for seven years,
following his public comments about black African IQ in 2007,
which were widely deemed racist.
In October 2007, Watson told the Sunday Times in an interview
that he was “gloomy about the prospect of Africa”
because “all our social policies are based on the fact that
their intelligence is the same as ours, whereas all the testing
says not really.”
Since then, Watson has not been invited to give public lectures.
“Because I was an ‘unperson’ I was fired from the boards of
companies, so I have no income, apart from my academic
income,” he explained before auctioning off his Nobel Prize.
Watson said he had plans to donate some of the proceeds of the
sale of the medal to the “institutions that have looked after
me,” including the Universities of Chicago and Cambridge.
Usmanov is worth $15.8 billion, according to Forbes magazine. He
is also a major shareholder in Arsenal Football Club. The Sunday
Times named him the second-richest man in Britain in 2014.