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ISTANBUL: Meeting held to show solidarity to attacked Azerbaijani wr

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  • ISTANBUL: Meeting held to show solidarity to attacked Azerbaijani wr

    Hurriyet Daily News, Turkey
    Feb 15 2013


    BOOKS > Meeting held to show solidarity to attacked Azerbaijani writer

    ISTANBUL - Hürriyet Daily News
    by Vercihan ZiflioÄ?lu

    The YeÅ?iller ve Sol Gelecek Partisi (Greens and Left Future Party)
    held a solidarity meeting on Feb. 13 at Cezayir Restaurant located in
    Istanbul's Galatasaray district for Azerbaijani writer Akram Aylisli.
    Aylisli has been under fire from both the state and the public after
    the release of his latest novel, `Stone Dreams,' which depicts a story
    of Azerbaijani-Armenian friendship.

    The meeting was attended by a number of intellectuals, authors, poets,
    and students. Armenian writer Levon Cavakhyan, who himself suffered a
    similar experience on the other side of the coin, sent a message of
    solidarity to Aylisli. Cavakhyan was dismissed from the Writers' Union
    of Armenia in 2008 after writing about Azerbaijani-Armenian
    friendship.

    Azerbaijani intellectuals living in Turkey are to appeal to the Human
    Rights Association's Istanbul Office for Aylisli today, and they will
    also ask the Azerbaijan Embassy to provide protection for the writer.

    Supporting the writer

    PEN International has also taken action for Aylisli. Prominent
    publisher, author and human rights activist Ragıp Zarakolu called on
    the international public to support Aylisli, adding that his call for
    peace should be supported. `We must stop such incidents in Azerbaijan.
    A voice should be raised from this geography, since we have provided
    Azerbaijan with this strength,' he said.

    Zarakolu also criticized the leftist groups in Turkey. `We have become
    so West-centric that we have left the Azerbaijani groups alone with
    their fates. It is time to act with solidarity,' he said.

    Turkish Writers Union (TYS) chair Mustafa Köz said that the incidents
    were against both reason and conscience. `Writers are the consciences
    of their countries. We should protect these consciences, so we side
    with Aylisli,' Köz said.

    `I would hardly believe the incidents in my country,' Azerbaijani poet
    Suna Araslı told Hürriyet Daily News before the meeting.

    Araslı said a bounty of 10,000 euros had been declared for an ear of
    Aylisli, his books had been buried in symbolic funeral ceremonies, and
    a DNA test was demanded by the Azerbaijani Parliament to prove whether
    he was actually Armenian.

    Aylisli was the recipient of many national and international awards,
    and was also declared `Azerbaijani National Writer' in 1987, but
    President Ä°lham Aliyev stripped him of all his national honors on Feb.
    7 in light of the latest book. Aylisli's son and wife have also been
    fired from their jobs.

    February/15/2013


    From: Baghdasarian
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