






This is the fifteenth year of the tradition of The Empty Chair at the International Festival of Authors, whereby PEN Canada and the festival honour one writer who symbolizes the many writers in the world who are not able to travel freely and to read from their works at literary festivals around the world. (The first Empty Chair in 1994 was the Nigerian writer, Ken Saro Wiwa, who was tragically executed one year later, in defiance of worldwide outrage.)









This is the fifteenth year of the tradition of The Empty Chair at the International Festival of Authors, whereby PEN Canada and the festival honour one writer who symbolizes the many writers in the world who are not able to travel freely and to read from their works at literary festivals around the world. (The first Empty Chair in 1994 was the Nigerian writer, Ken Saro Wiwa, who was tragically executed one year later, in defiance of worldwide outrage.)
Nobel Laureate Orhan Pamuk (who is appearing at IFOA XXX) has said of Hrant Dink's murder: "In a sense, we are all responsible for his death. However, at the very forefront of this responsibility are those who still defend article 301 of the Turkish Penal Code. Those who campaigned against him, those who portrayed this sibling of ours as an enemy of Turkey, those who painted him as a target, they are the most responsible in this. And then, in the end, we are all responsible."


BACKGROUND: Following Dink's murder it was revealed that he had informed and warned the authorities about the plans to kill him but was not taken seriously. A number of other writers and journalists were allegedly put on extremist "death lists" and placed under police protection.
At the tenth and most recent trial hearing held at the Istanbul 14th Heavy Penal Court on 6 July, proceedings were marred by a comment made by defendant Ogun Samast who said in court that he had "Only five more years…." The Dink family lawyers protested, stating that "Whoever has made him believe that he only has five more years, has threatened the Dink family." They called on the judge to take action.
Article 301: Article 301 is still in place, and around 25 writers and journalists are on trial under it — among over 70 in total; there are many more non-writers on trial under Article 301, charged with "insult" to the Turkish state and institutions in their writings. Article 301 is incompatible with international standards safeguarding freedom of expression. PEN Canada joins with writers around the world in demanding that Article 301 be abolished and that the trials against writers and journalists be ended.
PEN Canada is the Canadian centre of International PEN, the association of writers with over 15,000 members in 144 centres in 102 countries. PEN promotes friendship and intellectual co-operation among writers and campaigns for freedom of expression everywhere. For more information: www.pencanada.ca
For further information: Kendra Ward, PEN Canada, (416) 703-8448 ext.25