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U.S.-based Turkish professor facing trial over controversial book

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  • U.S.-based Turkish professor facing trial over controversial book

    U.S.-based Turkish professor facing trial over controversial book

    AP Worldstream; Jul 14, 2006

    A University of Arizona assistant professor has been charged in Turkey
    with "insulting Turkishness" and could face a prison sentence.

    Elif Shafak, who is a Turkish citizen, said she will stand trial
    because of the words uttered by fictional Armenian characters in
    her novel "The Bastard of Istanbul" _ a book she wrote while she was
    living in Tucson.

    In the book, an Armenian character refers to "Turkish butchers."

    The Turkish government and some international historians reject the
    claim that a mass evacuation and related deaths of up to 1.5 million
    Armenians living in Turkey from 1915 to 1923 was genocide. Turkey
    also says the death toll is inflated.

    Most Armenian and Western scholars say the massacres were genocide,
    but Turkey has denied it, saying only that many Armenians died
    of starvation, disease and exposure on forced marches to Syria in
    retaliation against the Christian minority for reportedly collaborating
    with Russia during World War I.

    Shafak, 35, is on a one-year leave from her teaching post in the UA's
    department of Near Eastern studies.

    She said her book was released in Turkey on March 8 and already has
    sold more than 50,000 copies.

    The charges against Shafak were filed under the controversial Article
    301 of the Turkish Criminal Code.

    The European Union has frequently warned Turkey that its efforts
    to join the bloc could be hampered by Article 301, which sets out
    penalties for insulting the Turkish Republic, its officials, or
    "Turkishness," and has been used to bring charges against dozens of
    journalists, publishers and scholars.

    No trial date has been set yet, Shafak said. Her case has been reported
    in the Turkish media but has not been confirmed by prosecutors or
    court officials.

    Shafak said her book "questions two big taboos, one of them a political
    taboo _ the Armenian Question _ and the other a sexual taboo _
    incest. So it was not easy to digest for some people and it caused
    a lot of stir."
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