Dear Friend:

Alison Flood's article above appears n the Guardian,UK this morning (11 02 
2012):

-bhuban

Taslima Nasrin attacks 'cancer' of censorship in Indian society
After the cancellation of Salman Rushdie's festival appearance, Taslima Nasrin 
attacks the growing 'appetite for censorship' in India which has prevented her 
own book launch

.



Alison Flood 

guardian.co.Article history


Against censorship ... supporters of Taslima Nasrin at the Kolkata Book Fair 
hold up copies of her latest book. Photograph: Piyal Adhikary / EPA

The writer Taslima Nasrin has hit out at a "growing cancer" afflicting Indian 
society, identifying a increasing "appetite for censorship" after the second 
high profile literary event in less than a month was cancelled amid concerns 
over security.

"Writers and artists have become the soft targets of religious extremists," she 
said. "The authority tries to appease either Hindu fanatics or Muslim fanatics 
in India. All the political parties have different agendas, but they have no 
agenda or intention to value freedom of expression. It's a dangerous race, who 
can violate free speech more."

A week after plans for the novelist Salman Rushdie to appear at the Jaipur 
literature festival were scrapped due to threats of assassination the author 
later judged to be fabricated, the launch of the latest volume of Nasrin's 
autobiography, Nirbashan (Exile), at the Kolkata Book Fair was abandoned.

Nasrin fled Bangladesh in 1994 when Islamic extremists threatened to kill her, 
saying that she had made "objectionable comments" about Islam and the prophet 
Muhammad – which the author denies. After a decade in Europe she moved to 
Kolkata, where she lived until 2007, when she was forced into hiding after 
being attacked for being "anti-Islam" at a book launch in the south Indian 
state of Tamil Nadu.

The writer, who now lives in Delhi, was not due to be present in person at the 
launch of Nirbashan, but a protest from the All India Minority Forum still 
forced fair organisers to call it off. The Kolkata Book Fair did not respond to 
the Guardian's request for comment, but explained to the Times of India that 
they "could not risk" it. "We were told by this group that the release might 
cause trouble inside the fair," said spokesperson Tridib Chatterjee. When her 
publisher later organised a smaller release on their stall at the fair, 
protesters attempted to prevent it.
"You may wonder why the authority tries to ban me or ban my book launch," said 
Nasrin. "They believe I am anti-Islam, and supporting me or allowing me entry 
to the country or the state or the city or the book fair would send a wrong 
message to the Muslim fanatics. They fear they would lose the Muslim vote. They 
do not want to take the risk of a single Muslim vote."
The author believes "the appetite for censorship is growing in India", she 
said. With Rushdie prevented by fears of violence from attending or even 
speaking via video link at the Jaipur event in January, Nasrin says we are 
witnessing "the disturbing victory of Islamic gangsters" in Jaipur and Kolkata. 
"I am wondering how to stop this growing cancer from spreading," she said.

Like Rushdie, Nasrin also suspects her book launch did not represent a genuine 
security threat. "It was something cooked up," she said, "as launching a book 
by a controversial author could have proved awkward for the fair and the 
government."

According to Nasrin, intolerance is growing "because the government does not 
take action against intolerant fanatics and the fanatics are forgiven for 
whatever violence they commit in the name of religion ... India needs to 
secularise the states, judiciary and educational systems. People need to learn 
about the principles of democracy, freedom of expression, human rights and 
humanism. They need to be enlightened. In the name of 'Indian secularism', 
irrational blind faith and the barbarity of all religions seem to be accepted 
and respected equally

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