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Turkey's Pamuk cancels German trip amid safety fears

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  • Turkey's Pamuk cancels German trip amid safety fears

    Reuters, UK
    Jan 31 2007

    Turkey's Pamuk cancels German trip amid safety fears
    Wed Jan 31, 2007 8:51am ET


    By Madeline Chambers

    BERLIN (Reuters) - Nobel-prize winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk
    has canceled a trip to Germany at short notice, his German publisher
    said on Wednesday, as concerns for his personal security grow.

    Pamuk's safety became an issue after the murder this month of
    prominent Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink in Istanbul. A key
    suspect in that murder, escorted by police into a court house, warned
    Pamuk to be careful.

    Pamuk, who won the Nobel prize for literature in October, had been
    due to visit several German cities, including Cologne, Hamburg,
    Stuttgart and Munich on a book reading tour starting at the end of
    this week.

    "We heard from him yesterday afternoon that he had decided to
    cancel," said a spokeswoman for Hanser publishers in Munich.

    "It was his decision but he gave no reason."

    German media reported the writer had been worried about a possible
    attack although Berlin police said they were unaware of any threat.
    The government declined to comment other than to say they did not
    know the reason for Pamuk's decision.

    The murdered Dink had been a hate figure for ultra-nationalists
    because he had urged Turks to acknowledge the mass killing of
    Armenians on Turkish soil in 1915, still a highly sensitive issue in
    Turkey.

    Both Dink and Pamuk have been prosecuted under laws restricting
    freedom of expression in Turkey, which wants to join the European
    Union.

    In a what was seen as a test case for freedom of speech in Turkey,
    Pamuk was tried for insulting "Turkishness" after telling a Swiss
    paper in 2005 that 1 million Armenians had died in Turkey during
    World War One and 30,000 Kurds had perished in recent decades.

    Though the court dismissed the charges on a technicality, other
    writers and journalists are still being prosecuted under the article
    and can face a jail sentence of up to three years.

    PEN, a body which speaks up for persecuted writers, said threats
    against Pamuk had to be taken seriously and urged the EU to be strict
    with Turkey.

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    "The EU should continue to make clear that entry for Turkey is only
    possible if democracy is stronger there," Germany's PEN center
    President Johano Strasser told German radio.

    Pamuk, whose best-known novels include "My Name is Red" and "Snow",
    has a sizeable following in Germany, home to about 2.5 million people
    of Turkish descent.

    Kenan Kolat, head of the TGD Turkish Communities in Germany, said he
    did not know the background to the affair but saw no danger for the
    author if he came to Germany.

    "Of course there are nationalists here, too, but I would really not
    expect any violence," Kolat told Reuters.

    Last year a Berlin opera house caused a storm in Germany when it
    canceled a production of Mozart's "Idomeneo" which showed Prophet
    Mohammad's severed head, citing security fears.

    (Additional reporting by Thomas Krumenacker and Darren Butler in
    Istanbul)
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