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  • Death threats to Turkish author

    Spiegel Online, Germany
    Jan 31 2007

    DEATH THREATS TO TURKISH AUTHOR
    Orhan Pamuk Cancels Trip to Germany

    Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk has cancelled a promotional tour of
    Germany. His decision is thought to be related to threats shouted at
    the writer by the militant nationalist accused of ordering the
    killing of journalist Hrant Dink.


    The Nobel Prize-winning author Orhan Pamuk has decided to cancel a
    trip to Germany in the light of the recent murder of the
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink. Threats shouted at Pamuk by
    the alleged mastermind behind that murder seem to have persuaded the
    author to keep a low profile for the time being.

    The celebrated Turkish writer was due to receive an honorary
    doctorate at Berlin's Free University on Friday before embarking on a
    reading tour of major German cities. Pamuk's German publisher, Carl
    Hanser Verlag, and the Free University confirmed Wednesday media
    reports that the author had cancelled the trip at short notice.

    Pamuk is believed to be concerned about travelling following the
    assassination of Hrant Dink on Jan. 19. Yasin Hayal, the alleged
    mastermind behind that murder, declared on his way into court on Jan.
    24: "Tell Orhan Pamuk to wise up!" The nationalist is accused of
    initiating Dink's slaying, having admitted to police that he urged
    the underage Ogün Samast to carry out the killing and even provided
    him with the weapon.


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    The decision to cancel the tour will be another blow to Turkey's
    reputation when it comes to the issue of freedom of expression.
    Pamuk, like Dink, had appeared before a Turkish court charged with
    "insulting Turkishness" after commenting on the deaths of up to one
    and a half million Armenians at the end of World War I.

    However, the case was dropped after the Turkish Minister of Justice
    said that a new legal code removed it from his jurisdiction. Official
    Turkish policy is to deny that there was any genocidal campaign
    against the Armenians, claiming that they died along with many ethnic
    Turks during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire. Pamuk is despised by
    militant Turkish nationalists for talking about the mass murder and
    for criticizing the Turkish government's handling of the conflict
    with the Kurdish separatists in the south east of the country.

    The author of Snow and My Name is Red had planned to travel to
    Berlin, Cologne, Hamburg, Stuttgart and Munich to read from his
    latest book Istanbul: Memories and the City. Berlin's Free University
    confirmed that the presentation of the honorary doctorate had been
    postponed, and that no new date had been set for the ceremony. The
    university announced that it "greatly" regretted the cancellation.

    The chair of Germany's Islamic Council, Ali Kizilkaya, expressed his
    disappointment at Pamuk's decision. "A Nobel Prize winner who can't
    travel is something regrettable," he told the news agency DDP. He
    called on the author to visit Germany at a later date. "Freedom can't
    be restricted through threats," he said.

    There is not thought to be a concrete threat against the author in
    Germany. Rather Pamuk is believed to be concerned about travelling at
    all at the moment.
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