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EU official meets Turkish novelist who faces prison

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  • EU official meets Turkish novelist who faces prison

    EU official meets Turkish novelist who faces prison


    ISTANBUL, Oct 8 (Reuters) - A senior European Union official on
    Saturday met best-selling Turkish novelist Orhan Pamuk, who faces a
    possible three-year jail sentence for his views, and urged EU
    candidate Turkey to respect freedom of expression.

    EU Enlargement Commissioner Olli Rehn is in Turkey to mark the opening
    of EU membership talks this week with the large Muslim nation after
    years of delay due partly to human rights concerns.

    "Free speech and free expression are core values of the European
    Union," Rehn's spokeswoman Krisztina Nagy quoted him as saying after
    meeting Pamuk at his home in Istanbul.

    "You don't have to agree with everything a writer or journalist says
    but they all have a right to express themselves freely," Rehn was
    quoted as saying.

    Pamuk, best known for historical novels such as "My Name is Red" and
    "The White Castle", is being charged in connection with claims that
    Armenians suffered genocide at Ottoman Turkish hands during World War
    One.

    The first hearing in his trial has been set for Dec. 16.

    Underlining the sensitivity of the Armenian issue in Turkey, an
    Istanbul court gave Armenian-Turkish journalist Hrank Dink a six-month
    suspended sentence on Friday for "insulting Turkish identity" in an
    article he wrote.

    Dink denies any wrongdoing and says he had in fact called on the
    Armenian diaspora to reject the anger they felt towards Turkey for
    events which happened 90 years ago.

    Nagy told Reuters Rehn had wanted to meet Pamuk because he admired his
    work. She said they had discussed literature and the situation in
    Turkey and in Europe.

    Pamuk's comments about the Armenians upset the Turkish establishment
    and nationalists, who strongly deny the Armenian genocide claims.

    They were also angered by Pamuk's remarks that Turkish forces shared
    responsibility for the death of more than 30,000 Kurds in southeast
    Turkey during separatist fighting there in the 1980s and 1990s.

    Rehn met Turkish political leaders in the capital Ankara on Thursday
    and told them their country would now come under much closer scrutiny
    as it tries to bring its laws and standards into line with those of
    the wealthy 25-nation EU.



    10/08/05 13:22 ET
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