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Publisher And Leading Turkish PEN Member Ragip Zarakolu Arrested

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  • Publisher And Leading Turkish PEN Member Ragip Zarakolu Arrested

    PUBLISHER AND LEADING TURKISH PEN MEMBER RAGIP ZARAKOLU ARRESTED

    Targeted News Service
    October 31, 2011 Monday 10:54 PM EST

    The PEN American Center issued the following news release:

    PEN American Center is shocked to learn that Ragip Zarakolu, a
    renowned publisher and a leading advocate for freedom of expression in
    Turkey, was arrested on October 28, in what PEN calls "a disturbing
    acceleration of violations of the rights of Turkish and Kurdish
    activists, writers, and scholars."

    Ragip Zarakolu, director of the Belge Publishing House and a member of
    the Turkish PEN Center and chair of the Freedom to Publish Committee
    of the Turkish Publishers Association, was arrested around 6:00 p.m.

    on October 28, 2011, one of at least 40 activists who were detained
    in Istanbul on Friday. Turkish authorities have arrested up to 1,000
    scholars, writers, publishers, and rights advocates during a two-year
    crackdown targeting activists who focus on Kurdish issues. This list
    of those arrested Friday also includes Busra Ersanli, a constitutional
    law expert and a member of the pro-Kurdish Peace and Democracy Party
    (BDP). Zarakolu's son, Deniz Zarakolu, who is an editor at Belge
    Publishing House and a Ph.D. student at Bilgi University, was arrested
    on October 4. It is unclear whether charges have been filed against
    any of those arrested in Friday's roundup.

    PEN American Center Freedom to Write Program Director Larry Siems
    expressed dismay about the most recent wave of arrests, which comes on
    the heels of intense military operations against Kurdish rebels after
    attacks by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) killed 24 Turkish solders
    earlier this month. "It is essential not to confuse the efforts of
    those who, like Ragip Zarakolu, have worked to bring down barriers of
    censorship in Turkey with those who press political agendas through
    violence," said Siems. "Zarakolu is an honored PEN colleague and an
    internationally-recognized defender of the right to write and publish
    freely. We emphatically protest his arrest."

    Zarakolu's staunch belief in free expression, his tireless campaign
    against book bannings, and his courage in publishing works that
    challenge Turkey's repressive censorship laws have resulted in a
    catalog of indictments dating back to the early 1970s. The Belge
    Publishing House, which Zarakolu founded with his wife Ayse Nur in
    1977, has tested Turkish publishing restrictions by translating and
    publishing controversial books from Armenian, Greek, and Kurdish
    authors in Turkish editions, including works that documented the
    Armenian genocide and the experiences of Turkey's Kurdish minority.

    Zarakolu's office was firebombed by a right-wing extremist group
    in 1995, and from 1971 to 1991, Zarakolu was banned from traveling
    outside Turkey.

    Ayse Nur Zarakolu received the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write
    Award in 1997. Since her death in 2002, Ragip Zarakolu has faced an
    ongoing barrage of charges, most recently for publishing Mehmet Guler's
    The KCK File/The Global State and Kurds Without a State in March 2011.

    "Ragip Zarakolu's arrest is a blow to Turkey's efforts to create a
    free and open society," said poet and essayist Peter Balakian, whose
    memoir Black Dog of Fate: An American Son Uncovers His Armenian Past
    was published in a Turkish edition by Belge. "For over four decades
    Ragip and his late wife and son have been at the cutting edge of social
    change in Turkey, publishing books on subjects that the government
    has deemed taboo--especially subjects dealing with minority issues
    in Turkey and the histories of minority cultures."

    "Ragip Zarakolu has been honored by almost every leading publishing
    organization in the world for his courage, his patience, his
    intellectual rigor, and his pursuit of genuine democracy," Balakian
    added.

    Writer, historian, and PEN Member Barbara Goldsmith called Zarakolu's
    arrest a matter of urgent concern to writers and publishers around
    the world. "Ragip Zarakolu, who has devoted his life to freedom of
    thought and expression, human rights, and social justice has been
    repeatedly imprisoned and his writing banned in Turkey," Goldsmith
    said. "If Zarakolu is not given his freedom, then all of us give up our
    freedom to write. If Zarakolu is not free, then none of us are free."


    From: Baghdasarian
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