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Turk Writer Says She Looks Forward To Start Of Trial

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  • Turk Writer Says She Looks Forward To Start Of Trial

    TURK WRITER SAYS SHE LOOKS FORWARD TO START OF TRIAL
    by Susanne Fowler

    The International Herald Tribune
    September 19, 2006 Tuesday

    Elif Shafak, the Turkish author, is awaiting clearance from a doctor
    to attend her trial that starts in Istanbul this week. She is being
    prosecuted on charges she insulted "Turkishness" because characters in
    her book, "The Bastard of Istanbul," refer to the deaths of Armenians
    in 1915 as genocide.

    "Of course the court will not be postponing this trial," Shafak said
    Monday by telephone from the Istanbul hospital where she gave birth to
    a daughter by Caesarean section on Saturday. "I am planning to attend,
    hoping to attend."

    Shafak said a decision would be made Tuesday.

    The case is seen as a test of Turkey's commitment to freedom of
    expression as it negotiates to join the European Union.

    "It's no longer an Elif Shafak case, not a private case," said the
    French-born Shafak, 34. "It should be turned into a trial against
    Article 301," the section of the Turkish Criminal Code under which
    she is being prosecuted.

    The nationalists who sued her are rallying their supporters by
    circulating statements urging a strong turnout.

    Among those planning to appear in support of Shafak are envoys from
    International PEN, the worldwide association of writers that is based
    in London. Eugene Schoulgin, a PEN board member in Istanbul, said
    Monday: "What will most likely happen in Shafak's case is that there
    will be one or two hearings and the case will either be dismissed or
    she will be acquitted. But what is unacceptable is that Turkey opens
    these kinds of trials in the first place."

    Meanwhile, Shafak and her husband, Eyup Can, were welcoming their
    daughter, Shehrazade Zelda, named for the storyteller of "The 1,001
    Arabian Nights" and the wife of another novelist, F. Scott Fitzgerald.
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