Frankfurt fair amidst Rushdie row

Frankfurt fair amidst Rushdie row
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Highlights

The world’s biggest book fair opens on Wednesday under a cloud of controversy with Iran calling on all Muslim nations to boycott the exhibition because author Salman Rushdie has been invited to speak.

The world’s biggest book fair opens on Wednesday under a cloud of controversy with Iran calling on all Muslim nations to boycott the exhibition because author Salman Rushdie has been invited to speak.


Organisers of the Frankfurt Book Fair defended the choice, saying freedom of expression was a key theme at this year’s gathering of writers and publishers, 10 months after Islamists marched into the Paris office of French satirical weekly Charlie Hebdo and gunned down its editorial team.

“We feel a strong politicisation this year and freedom of expression will be a key theme,” said Juergen Boos, director of the exhibition.

The show promises to be controversial even before its doors open, with a press conference on Tuesday to be headlined by Rushdie, who has a death warrant on his head over his 1989 book The Satanic Verses.

Iran’s then supreme leader, Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini, issued a fatwa saying the British author should be killed, forcing Rushdie to go into hiding and the British government placed the writer under police protection.

Tehran, last Wednesday, said it was boycotting the Frankfurt fair, because it 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”. It urged other Muslim nations to join its boycott. But the fair’s organisers insisted that “freedom of the word is not negotiable.”
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