Salman Rushdie © Ralph Orlowski / Reuters |
Forty state-run media
outlets have joined forces to put a new bounty on the head of controversial
award-winning British Indian writer Salman Rushdie.
RT
report continues:
The
reinforcement of the fatwa against Rushdie coincides with the 27th anniversary
of the legal decree being issued by the first Supreme Leader of Iran, Ayatollah
Ruhollah Khomeini, according to the state-run Fars News Agency.
Khomeini
called for Rushdie’s assassination in February 1989 on charges of blasphemy
over Rushdie’s novel, The Satanic
Verses.
The
book was banned in several countries after many Muslims considered its
depiction of Mohammed blasphemous. Rushdie was also put under police protection
by the British government and went into hiding for several years.
At
least two of the translators involved with the publication were attacked.
Japanese translator Hitoshi Igarashi was stabbed to death outside his office at
Tsukuba University north of Tokyo, while Italian translator Ettore Capriolo
survived being stabbed at his apartment in Milan, the New York Times reported in 1991.
Iran’s
former President Mohammad Khatami said the threat against Rushdie was
"finished" in 1998, but the fatwa has never been officially lifted.
Instead, it has been reiterated on a number of occasions by Iran’s Supreme
Leader Ali Khamenei and other officials over the years.
The
US$600,000 bounty is led in financial contributions by Fars News Agency and is
the largest organized effort to date in support of the fatwa.
Iran
withdrew from the Frankfurt Book Fair last year, one of the biggest publishing
industry events in the world, after Rushdie was announced as guest speaker, and
called on other Muslim nation to boycott the fair.
The
Iranian government said the event had “under the pretext of freedom of
expression, invited a person who is hated in the Islamic world and created the
opportunity for Salman Rushdie ... to make a speech”, AFP reported.
"Imam Khomeini's fatwa
is a religious decree and it will never lose its power or fade out,"
Iran’s Deputy Culture Minister Seyed Abbas Salehi told Fars News Agency.
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