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Turkish novelist speaks out over Armenian issue - again

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  • Turkish novelist speaks out over Armenian issue - again

    The Daily Star - Lebanon
    June 3 2006

    Turkish novelist speaks out over Armenian issue - again

    Saturday, June 03, 2006


    MOSCOW: Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk made a plea Thursday for freedom
    of expression in Turkey on the mass killings of Armenians carried out
    under the Ottoman Empire, calling on his country to become "free and
    more open." "Whatever happened to Ottoman Armenians, we in Turkey
    should be able to talk about. It is first a Turkish issue, an issue
    of freedom of speech, democracy and liberal society rather than an
    international political issue," Pamuk said in Moscow.

    The Turkish writer - a winner of numerous international awards for
    his writings - was in Moscow to promote the Russian translation of
    his book "Istanbul: Memories and the City."

    "I hope my country will be free and more open, that we can talk about
    this issue without having any anxiety. But I don't know when," he
    said. "There should be no limits to freedom of speech."

    Last year, prosecutors charged Pamuk with "public denigration of the
    Turkish identity" for remarks on the massacres of Armenians made in
    an interview with a Swiss newspaper.
    http://www.dailystar.com.lb

    "One million Armenians were killed in these lands and nobody but me
    dares to talk about it," Pamuk was quoted as saying in the interview.

    The charges, which could have jailed Pamuk for up to three years,
    were later dropped.

    Armenians say up to 1.5 million of their kinsmen died in orchestrated
    killings nine decades ago during the last years of the Ottoman
    Empire, the precursor of modern Turkey.

    Turkey argues that 300,000 Armenians and thousands of Turks were
    killed in what was civil strife during World War I when the Armenians
    rose up against their Ottoman rulers.

    Born in 1952 in Istanbul, Pamuk became famous for works such as "The
    White Castle," "My Name is Red" and "Snow." His works have been
    translated into 40 languages. - AFP
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