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Nobel Novelist Pamuk Says He's Not A Writer In Exile

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  • Nobel Novelist Pamuk Says He's Not A Writer In Exile

    NOBEL NOVELIST PAMUK SAYS HE'S NOT A WRITER IN EXILE

    Ottawa Citizen, Canada
    Final Edition
    May 31, 2007 Thursday

    HAY-ON-WYE, Wales - Nobel prize-winning Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk,
    threatened by a suspect in the slaying of a journalist, said on Tuesday
    he had recently been in Turkey and did not consider himself a writer
    in exile.

    The 2006 Literature Laureate's safety became an issue after
    Turkish-Armenian journalist Hrant Dink was killed in Istanbul in
    January.

    A key suspect warned Pamuk to be careful and some media reports had
    said Pamuk was living in exile.

    However, Pamuk, who won the Nobel for novels including Snow and
    My Name is Red, told an audience at the Hay literature festival in
    Britain he had recently visited Turkey.

    Asked about suggestions he was a writer in exile, he said, "There is
    some political pressure on me. I was just in Turkey. There were some
    misunderstandings and clarifying these misunderstandings took some
    energy, but we should not dwell on them too much here."

    Pamuk, who was on the jury of the Cannes Film Festival last week,
    was prosecuted in 2005 under laws restricting freedom of expression in
    Turkey after telling a Swiss newspaper that one million Armenians had
    died in Turkey in the First World War and 30,000 Kurds had perished
    more recently.

    Charges against him were dropped after his case triggered criticism
    from the European Union, which Turkey hopes to join.

    Pamuk said he planned to publish his next novel in Turkey in
    December. The book, Museum of Innocence, is about an upper-middle
    class man in contemporary Istanbul obsessed with a cousin.
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