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Pamuk Believed To Be In Exile In US

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  • Pamuk Believed To Be In Exile In US

    PAMUK BELIEVED TO BE IN EXILE IN US
    Michelle Pauli

    The Guardian Unlimited, UK
    Feb 14 2007

    The Turkish author Orhan Pamuk has reportedly left his home country
    to live in America amid fears for his life. The Nobel laureate is
    believed to be at risk of assassination in Turkey following the murder
    of Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink last month. Threats appeared to
    have been made against Pamuk by the man who confessed to orchestrating
    the murder.

    The International Herald Tribune reported on Thursday February 1 that
    Pamuk had boarded a plane for New York to begin a lecture tour of
    American universities and, according to Fatih Altayli, a prominent
    columnist writing for the Turkish daily newspaper Sabah, he has no
    plans to return to Turkey. The writer had already cancelled a tour
    of Germany, which has a sizeable Turkish community, at the end of
    last month.

    "What I was told was more than mere rumour: Pamuk recently withdrew
    $400,000 from his bank account and said he would leave Turkey and
    would not be returning to his country anytime soon," wrote Altayli.

    According to the Daily Telegraph, those close to Pamuk have declined
    to comment publicly on the report because of the "sensitivity of Mr
    Pamuk's position".

    Pamuk's work, of which the best known are his recent novels My Name
    is Red and Snow, explores Turkey as a country poised between east
    and west, tradition and modernity. He is the fastest selling author
    in Turkish history, as well as commanding international acclaim.

    He became a lightning rod for controversy in Turkey after talking
    openly about the mass killing of Armenians in the early 20th century,
    and is reviled by the country's nationalists who regard him as
    a traitor.

    In 2005 he was tried in an Istanbul court for the crime of "insulting
    Turkishness" under the controversial Article 301 of the Turkish penal
    code, but was acquitted on a technicality a month later. This week,
    Turkey's foreign minister backed calls to amend the article, but not
    to repeal it.

    http://books.guardian.co.uk/news/articles/0,, 2012979,00.html?gusrc=rss&feed=10
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