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Turkey Charges Acclaimed Author

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  • Turkey Charges Acclaimed Author

    TURKEY CHARGES ACCLAIMED AUTHOR
    Karl Vick

    Kurdistan Regional Government, Iraq
    Sept 1 2005

    ISTANBUL, Aug. 31 -- An acclaimed Turkish novelist, Orhan Pamuk,
    has been charged with the "public denigrating of Turkish identity"
    and faces a possible prison sentence of three years, his publisher
    said Wednesday.

    The charge stems from an interview that Pamuk gave to a Swiss newspaper
    in February in which he said certain topics were regarded as off-limits
    in Turkey. As examples, he listed the massacre of Armenians in 1915
    and the ongoing war between Turkish security forces and Kurdish
    guerrillas as examples.

    "Thirty-thousand Kurds were killed here, 1 million Armenians as
    well. And almost no one talks about it," Pamuk told the newspaper,
    Tages-Anzeiger. "Therefore, I do."

    Turkey considers the Armenian deaths a consequence of war, with severe
    casualties on both sides, while Armenians say the deaths constitute
    a genocide. Under Turkish law, people can be jailed for differing
    with the government's line on the deaths, as well as on the presence
    of Turkish troops in Cyprus, which Turkey invaded in 1974, and other
    "fundamental national interests."

    Turkey's penal code was revised this year in hopes of bringing laws on
    freedom of expression closer to international standards, as demanded
    by the European Union, which Turkey wants to join. Organizations
    representing writers and journalists say more changes are needed.

    Pamuk was "just trying to point out that first you have to face it --
    a tragedy or a dispute or a problem, at least," said Tugrul Pasaoglu,
    Pamuk's publisher and an editor at Iletisim Yayinlari, a publishing
    house in Istanbul. "If you don't talk about it, then you can't find
    a solution."

    Pamuk, 53, is the most acclaimed novelist to emerge from Turkey
    in at least a generation. His books, including "My Name Is Red,"
    have been translated into more than 20 languages. His latest novel,
    "Snow," explores the tensions between Turkey's rigorously secular
    military establishment and political Islam by stranding a lovesick
    poet in a snowbound eastern Turkish city during a coup.

    In Turkey, however, Pamuk's international success has been
    overshadowed by his comments in Tages-Anzeiger. The remarks incensed
    ultranationalists, a powerful force in a country that opinion polls
    show may be the world's most patriotic.

    "There is nothing that constitutes a crime in this interview," said
    Nazan Senol, an attorney representing Pamuk, whose court date was
    set for Dec. 16. She noted that another state prosecutor's office
    also investigated the allegations and decided against filing charges.

    Turgay Evsen, the prosecutor who went forward with the case, earlier
    this year filed the same charge against a Turkish journalist of
    Armenian heritage, Hrant Dink. Evsen declined to comment on the
    Pamuk case.
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