Dear Friends:

The news below is from the Independent UK today (15 03 2012) sent by Andrew 
Buncombe.


-bhuban


Imran Khan cancels Delhi appearance after learning Salman Rushdie was also 
invited





Pakistani cricketer-turned-politician Imran Khan has pulled out of a conference 
in Delhi because the author Salman Rushdie is booked to speak at the same event.

In a statement issued by his political party, Mr Khan said he “could not even 
think of participating in any programme that included Salman Rushdie, who has 
caused immeasurable hurt to Muslims across the globe”. He apologised to the 
organisers and said he had only received the full programme the day before and 
immediately took action.
The decision by the former national captain, now riding high in the polls as 
Pakistan’s most popular politician, was likely taken to pre-empt the 
controversy that was certain to have been sparked in his country once it 
emerged that Mr Rushdie was taking part in the event. It is also a reminder, 
especially to those in the West who like to believe the former sportsman is a 
progressive bastion, that Mr Khan draws much of his support from religious 
conservatives and that his position is much more nuanced. He has often called 
for peace talks with the Taliban.
The World Cup-winning captain who heads the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf party, was 
to have taken part in the upcoming India Today Conclave, organised every year 
in Delhi by a leading media group and which attracts a range of leading 
international figures. Mr Khan was to deliver a keynote address.
But it then emerged on Tuesday that Mr Rushdie, author of the 1988 novel The 
Satanic Verses, was also among the guests and that had been invited to speak at 
a session. Also taking part in that session is Aatish Taseer, son of Salman 
Taseer, the governor of Pakistan's Punjab province who was killed by his own 
bodyguard in January 2011 because he had called for the reform of the country’s 
anti-blasphemy law.
“We deeply regret that Imran Khan will not address the India Today Conclave 
because of Salman Rushdie's participation,” Aroon Purie, Editor-in-Chief, of 
the India Today Group said in a statement. “The India Today Conclave is a 
platform for free and frank exchange of ideas. We do not endorse the views of 
any of our speakers but we do stand for the freedom of expression in all that 
we do.”
The incident follows controversy earlier this year when Mr Rushdie pulled out 
of the Jaipur literary festival, amid protests from some Muslim groups over The 
Satanic Verses, which the Indian government still prohibits from being brought 
into the country. A video link, organised after he said he felt he should not 
be present in person after receiving threat warnings from the police, was also 
cancelled.
In relation to Mr Rushdie’s decision not to participate in the Jaipur festival, 
Mr Khan said that no-one had the right to “inflict pain on a society” and 
described the author’s works as “painful”. On Twitter, Mr Rushdie responded by 
saying: “30 yrs ago Imran Khan was a fan at my 1982 Delhi lecture and 100 per 
cent secular. Now my work “humiliates” his “faith”. Which is the real Imran

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