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Pamuk cancels Germany visit amid safety fears

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  • Pamuk cancels Germany visit amid safety fears

    Pamuk cancels Germany visit amid safety fears


    Jess Smee in Berlin
    Wednesday January 31, 2007
    Guardian Unlimited

    Turkish Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk has cancelled a publicity tour of
    Germany amid fears for his safety following the murder of
    Turkish-Armenian editor Hrant Dink.

    Hanser Verlag, Pamuk's German publisher, confirmed that the celebrated
    author had called off a string of book readings in Hamburg, Cologne
    and Stuttgart. He was also due to receive an honourary degree at
    Berlin's Free University on Friday.

    Fears for Pamuk's safety are running high. Last week, Yasin Hayal, the
    man who police say has confessed to orchestrating Dink's murder,
    issued what appeared to be a direct threat to the novelist. "Orhan
    Pamuk, be smart! Be smart!" he called to journalists as he was being
    taken to an Istanbul courtroom by police. Police are investigating
    whether his words constitute a threat to the novelist, something that
    could lead to Hayal's prosecution.


    Both Pamuk and Dink have been the focus of controversy in Turkey after
    talking openly about the mass killings of Armenians in the early 20th
    century. They have been accused of the crime of "insulting
    Turkishness". Pamuk is famed for novels such as Snow and My Name is
    Red and won the Nobel prize for literature in 2006. His publisher said
    there were no immediate plans to reschedule the trip to the Germany
    where Pamuk has a large readership, partly because of the country's
    sizable Turkish community.

    Dink's assassination earlier this month has prompted an outpouring of
    outrage at home and abroad. Within Turkey it has sparked fierce debate
    about excessive nationalism and freedom of expression.
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