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  • Test For East And West

    TEST FOR EAST AND WEST
    Salman Rushdie

    Calcutta Telegraph, India
    Oct 12 2005

    - On both sides of the Bosphorus, Orhan Pamuk's case matters

    The work room of the writer Orhan Pamuk looks out over the Bosphorus,
    that fabled strip of water which, depending on how you see these
    things, separates or unites - or, perhaps, separates and unites -
    the worlds of Europe and Asia.

    There could be no more appropriate setting for a novelist whose work
    does much the same thing. In many books, most recently the acclaimed
    novel Snow (Knopf, 2004) and the haunting memoir/portrait of his
    home town, Istanbul: Memories and the City (Knopf, 2005), Pamuk has
    laid claim to the title, formerly held by Yashar Kemal, of "Greatest
    Turkish Writer".

    He is also an outspoken man. In 1999, for example, he refused the
    title of "state artist".

    "For years I have been criticizing the state for putting authors in
    jail, for only trying to solve the Kurdish problem by force and for
    its narrow-minded nationalism...," he said. "I don't know why they
    tried to give me the prize."

    He has described Turkey as having "two souls", and has criticized
    its human-rights abuses.

    "Geographically we are part of Europe," he says, "but politically?"

    I spent some days with Pamuk in July, at a literary festival in the
    pretty Brazilian seaside town of Parati. For those few days he seemed
    free of his cares, even though, earlier in the year, death threats
    made against him by Turkish ultranationalists - "He shouldn't be
    allowed to breathe," one said - had forced him to spend two months
    out of his country.

    But the clouds were gathering. The statement he made to the Swiss
    newspaper Tages Anzeiger on February 6, 2005, which had been the
    cause of the ultranationalists' wrath, was about to become a serious
    problem once again.

    "Thirty thousand Kurds and one million Armenians were killed in
    Turkey," he told the Swiss paper. "Almost no one dares to speak out
    on this but me."

    He was referring to the killings by Ottoman forces of thousands of
    Armenians between 1915 and 1917. Turkey does not contest the deaths,
    but denies that they amounted to genocide. Pamuk's reference to
    "30,000" Kurdish deaths refers to those killed since 1984 in the
    conflict between Turkish forces and Kurdish separatists.

    Debate on these issues has been stifled by stringent laws, some
    leading to lengthy lawsuits, fines and, in some cases, prison terms.

    On September 1 Pamuk was indicted by a district prosecutor for the
    crime of having "blatantly belittled Turkishness" by his remarks. If
    convicted he faces as long as three years in jail.

    Article 301/1 of the Turkish penal code, under which Pamuk is to be
    tried, states that "A person who explicitly insults being a Turk,
    the Republic or Turkish Grand National Assembly shall be sentenced
    to a penalty of imprisonment for a term of six months to three years...

    Where insulting being a Turk is committed by a Turkish citizen in a
    foreign country, the penalty shall be increased by one third." So,
    if Pamuk is found guilty, he faces an additional penalty for having
    made the statement abroad.

    You would think that the Turkish authorities might have avoided so
    blatant an assault on their most internationally celebrated writer's
    fundamental freedoms at the very moment that their application for full
    membership of the European Union - an extremely unpopular application
    in many EU countries - was being considered at the EU summit.

    However, in spite of being a state that has ratified both the United
    Nations International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and
    the European Convention on Human Rights, both of which see freedom
    of expression as central, Turkey continues to enforce a penal code
    that is clearly contrary to these same principles and, in spite of
    widespread global protests, has set the date for Pamuk's trial. It
    will begin, unless there is a change of heart, on December 16.

    That Pamuk is criticized by Turkish Islamists and radical nationalists
    is no surprise. That the attackers frequently disparage his works as
    obscure and self-absorbed, accusing him of having sold out to the
    West, is no surprise either. It is, however, disappointing to read
    intellectuals such as Soli Ozel, a newspaper columnist and a professor
    of international relations at Istanbul Bilgi University, criticizing
    "those, especially in the West, who would use the indictment against
    Pamuk to denigrate Turkey's progress toward greater civil rights -
    and toward European Union membership."

    Ozel wants the charges against Pamuk thrown out at the trial, and
    accepts that they represent an "affront" to free speech, but he
    prefers to stress "the distance that the country has covered in the
    past decade".

    This seems altogether too weak. The number of convictions and prison
    sentences under the laws that penalize free speech in Turkey has
    indeed declined in the past decade, but International PEN's records
    show that more than 50 writers, journalists and publishers currently
    face trial. Turkish journalists continue to protest against the
    revised penal code, and the International Publishers Association,
    in a deposition to the UN, has described this revised code as being
    "deeply flawed".

    EU commissioner Jose Manuel Barroso says that Turkey's entry into the
    EU is by no means assured, that it will have to win over the hearts
    and minds of the deeply sceptical EU citizenry.

    The Turkish application is being presented, most vociferously by
    Britain's prime minister Tony Blair and foreign secretary Jack Straw,
    as a test case for the EU. To reject it, we are told, would be a
    catastrophe, widening the gulf between Islam and the West. There is
    an element of Blairite poppycock in this, a disturbingly communalist
    willingness to sacrifice Turkish secularism on the altar of faith-based
    politics.

    But the Turkish application is indeed a test case for the EU: a
    test of whether the EU has any principles at all. If it has, then its
    leaders will insist that the charges against Pamuk be dropped at once -
    there is no need to keep him waiting for justice until December - and
    further insist on rapid revisions to Turkey's repressive penal code.

    An unprincipled Europe, which turned its back on great artists and
    fighters for freedom, would continue to alienate its citizens, whose
    disenchantment has already been widely demonstrated by the votes
    against the proposed new constitution.

    So the West is being tested as well as the East. On both sides of
    the Bosphorus, the Pamuk case matters.

    DISTRIBUTED BY THE NEW YORK TIMES SYNDICATE

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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