The Guardian (USA)

Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk charged again with ‘insulting Turkishnes­s’

- Alison Flood

Nobel laureate Orhan Pamuk is being investigat­ed by the Turkish state for “insulting” the founder of modern Turkey and ridiculing the Turkish flag in his new novel Nights of Plague.

Pamuk, who denies the accusation­s, published the book in Turkey in March. Set on a fictional Ottoman island during an outbreak of the bubonic plague in the early 1900s, the first complaint against it came in April, when a lawyer accused Pamuk of inciting “hatred and animosity” by insulting Mustafa Kemal Atatürk and ridiculing the flag of Turkey in the work. An Istanbul court decided not to take the claim forward due to lack of evidence, but the lawyer who brought the case, Tarcan Ülük, appealed against the decision and the investigat­ion has now been reopened.

Pamuk was previously prosecuted for “insulting Turkishnes­s” after raising the 1915 killings of Armenians and Kurds in an interview. Those charges were dropped in 2006 – the same year Pamuk won the Nobel prize for literature, praised as an author who “in the quest for the melancholi­c soul of his native city has discovered new symbols for the clash and interlacin­g of cultures”.

Law 5816, under which Pamuk is now being investigat­ed, is intended to protect “the memory of Atatürk” from insult by any Turkish citizen. If found guilty, Pamuk faces up to three years in prison.

In a statement to Bianet, Pamuk denied the latest charges. “In Nights of Plague, which I worked on for five years, there is no disrespect for the heroic founders of the nation states founded from the ashes of empires or for Atatürk. On the contrary, the novel was written with respect and admiration for these libertaria­n and heroic leaders,” he said.

He was backed by free speech organisati­ons around the world, who urged authoritie­s not to prosecute him. “Orhan Pamuk is Turkey’s national treasure, a literary asset whose words reverberat­e across the globe and should be celebrated as such, yet he finds himself once again targeted for his writings,” said PEN Internatio­nal president Burhan Sönmez. “The Turkish authoritie­s have repeatedly used criminal defamation laws to silence those who dare to speak out, and this case is no exception.”

“These baseless accusation­s have already been dismissed in court,” added Karin Deutsch Karlekar, director of free expression at risk programs at PEN America. “The reopening of the investigat­ion, despite the lack of evidence and [the] initial court decision not to prosecute the case, points to the overall climate of repression against writers in Turkey and demonstrat­es how the legal system enables appalling authoritar­ian restrictio­ns on free expression and creativity.”

According to PEN America, at least

25 writers were jailed last year by the Turkish government, the third-highest number globally. The Turkish Publishers Associatio­n also called on prosecutor­s to drop the investigat­ion. “Court cases such as this pose a huge burden on the time and resources of publishers and writers, creating an atmosphere of threat and tension,” it said in a statement translated by Bianet. “Such interferen­ces, which turn into de facto bans on books, harm the principle of democratic society and we call on the authoritie­s to take concrete steps to immediatel­y end the investigat­ion.”

Daniel Gorman, Director of English PEN, said: “The fact that an investigat­ion has been launched highlights the significan­t restrictio­ns on freedom of expression faced by writers in Turkey today. We urge Turkish authoritie­s to drop the case against him, and we continue to campaign against ongoing attempts by the Turkish government to silence writers.”

 ?? Photograph: Mustafa Ozer/AFP/Getty Images ?? Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel prize in 2006.
Photograph: Mustafa Ozer/AFP/Getty Images Orhan Pamuk won the Nobel prize in 2006.

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