An imprisoned Syrian
journalist and human rights activist has won a major a writing award
celebrating free speech, Associated Press reports.
Mazen Darwish shares the
PEN Pinter prize with India-born British novelist Salman Rushdie. The award was
announced Thursday at a ceremony in London.
Darwish was the director
of the Syrian Center for Media and Freedom of Expression when he was arrested
in February 2012 along with two colleagues. The three have been charged with
"publicizing terrorist acts."
Rushdie said Darwish
"courageously fought for civilized values — free expression, human rights
— in one of the most dangerous places in the world." He said he hoped the
prize would bolster calls for Darwish to be released.
The award was established
in 2009 in memory of Nobel Prize-winning playwright Harold Pinter. It goes
jointly to a British writer seen as sharing Pinter's "unflinching, unswerving"
gaze on society, and an international writer who has faced persecution, chosen
by the British winner and writers' organization PEN.
Rushdie spent years in
hiding after his novel "The Satanic Verses" drew a death edict from
Iran's religious authorities.
No comments:
Post a Comment