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Bangladesh online book seller censored by death threats
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| 21st March 2014
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| See article
from freethinker.co.uk |
A popular Bangladeshi online bookstore has stopped selling books by a well-known writer after an Islamic militant issued death threats on Facebook to the website's owner. Rokomari.com said in statement that it has stopped selling books authored by
Avijit Roy, a Bangladesh-born engineer and author who is currently living in the United States. Roy pioneered the popular Bangladeshi online blogging site Freethinker and rose to prominence with his books on philosophy, scientific thought and human
rights issues. The decision to withdraw his books was prompted by death threats posted to Facebook by Farabi Shafiur Rahman, an Islamist extremist allegedly linked to the hardline Islamist party Jamaat-e-Islami. Farabi accused Roy of
defaming Islam and the religious character Mohammed and accused Rokomari.com chairman Mahmudul Hasan Sohag of promoting atheism by selling Roy's books. In his Facebook post, Farabi specified the office address of Rokomari.com and called upon his
Islamist friends in the adjacent locality to attack. He also told Sohag that he would suffer the same fate as Ahmed Rajib Haider, a popular blogger known by the psuedonym Thaba Baba, who was hacked to death last year by machete-wielding Islamic
militants. Rokomari.com released a statement saying: A review committee has already started working to shape a policy under which no book that raises controversy will be shown on our site.
Roy commented:
My books are mostly on modern science and philosophy. These are not the books criticizing religious scriptures or any particular religion. They are mainly scientific books having references from reputed journals, books
and newspapers.
He added that his books have never generated complaints over their content and that one of his books was on Bangladesh's annual best sellers' list. |
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Ireland appoints a new book censorship board
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| 19th March 2014
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| See article from
independent.ie |
A new book censorship board has been appointed by the Government with the sole purpose of reviewing Justice Minister Alan Shatter's novel Laura . The minister's fictional tale of a married politician involved in a secret affair is the
only book to be reported to the Censorship of Publications Boards in the last five years. The office is due to be abolished by Arts Minister Jimmy Deenihan. But beforehand it must determine if Shatter's novel is suitable for sale in Ireland.
The board's chairman will be Cork solicitor Shane McCarthy and the other members are barrister Sinead Prunty, lecturer Noelle O'Connor, librarian Georgina Byrne, and retired policeman Philip Moynihan.
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| 18th March 2014
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Author Anne Rice petitions: 'Protect Amazon.com Users and Indie Publishing Authors from Bullying and Harassment by Removing Anonymity and Requiring Identity Verification for Reviewing and Forum Participation' See
article from newstatesman.com |
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10,000 copies of 420 books seized at Saudi censorship event
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| 17th
March 2014
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| See article
from google.com |
Saudi censors have banned hundreds of books, including works by renowned Palestinian poet Mahmud Darwish. The local Okaz daily reported that organisers at the Riyadh International Book Fair had confiscated more than 10,000 copies of 420 books during the exhibition.
Local news website Sabq.org reported that members of the kingdom's notorious religious police had protested at blasphemous passages in works by the late Darwish, widely considered one of the greatest Arab poets, pressing organisers to withdraw
all his books from the fair. Other banned books include:
- Works by Iraq's most famous modern poet, Badr Shaker al-Sayyab
- Iraqi poet, Abdul Wahab al-Bayati
- Palestinian poet Muin Bseiso.
- When will the Saudi Woman Drive a Car? by Abdullah al-Alami,
- The History of
Hijab
- Feminism in Islam.
- Books by Azmi Bishara, a former Arab Israeli MP who left the Jewish state in 2007
- Revolution , a book by Wael Ghonim, a secular Egyptian and former Google executive who became an icon
of the country's 2011 uprising
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Love Comes Later, a novel by Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar
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| 16th March 2014
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| See
article from
dailyprogress.com |
A new novel by an English professor has been banned there with little explanation for the reason. Mohanalakshmi Rajakumar said her book, Love Comes Later , highlights the dilemmas facing those from traditional societies with
modern ambitions. She said she offered to consider a separate edition for Qatar when the book was submitted to the ministry of culture for approval, but received no reply. Although one Qatari media report focused on a single kiss, Rajakumar
did not speculate on the reason for the censorship: The distributor's agent told me the officials told him, the book was banned because it was about 'Qatar and Qataris,' she said by email. They did not further
elaborate to me or to the distributor. The decision to ban the book for sale in Qatar does not prevent the rest of the world from reading it or my writing it. Nor did the content prevent the dozen or so Qatari male and female
citizens from reading early drafts, offering ideas, or supporting the book even now.
On her website Rajakumar said she wrote Love Comes Later knowing there was a possibility it would not be published in the country where it was
set. So she tried to write within the sensibilities of the public culture, which means the big three objections of sex, atheism and politics are not included in her examination of life in Qatar for modern twentysomething Qataris. She
writes: There's a death by car accident; reluctant engagements; difficult conversations with parents; and of course, one passionate kiss
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Malaysian bans a Ultraman comic book that uses the word 'Allah'
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| 9th March 2014
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| See article from
bangkokpost.com |
Malaysia has banned an Ultraman comic book because it uses the word Allah to describe the Japanese action hero. The Home Ministry claimed in a statement that the Malay-edition of Ultraman, The Ultra Power contained elements
that can undermine public security and societal morals. It claimed Ultraman is idolised by many children and equating the lead character, Ultraman King, with Allah would especially confuse Muslim children and damage their faith . The
government demands that the word Allah should be exclusively reserved for Muslims because of concerns its use by others would confuse Muslims and tempt them to convert. It also warned that use of the word can provoke the community and threaten public
safety. Ultraman is a fictional Japanese superhero who fights monsters and first appeared on television in the 1960s. A line in the book said Ultraman is considered and respected as Allah, or the Elder, to all ultra heroes .
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Politician adds prudery to political correctness over children's book with nude drawings of ordinary people
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| 27th February 2014
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| Thanks to Therumbler 16th February 2014. See
article from
independent.co.uk |
A strange prudishness has seized a section of political opinion in France. The leader of the main centre-right opposition party, Jean-François Copé, declared on television last week that his "blood ran cold" when he read a
children's book called Tous à poil ( All in the Buff ). The book has comical drawings of ordinary people, policemen, bakers, and teachers, taking off their clothes. Its aim is to teach small children not to be obsessed with perfect
bodies. According to Copé, the book is being forced on primary school children as part of a campaign by an ideologically rigid socialist government to subvert traditional attitudes to gender and the family. Tous à poil
had sold only 1,000 copies before Copé's comments on television made it sound like a blend of the Marquis de Sade and Karl Marx for five-year-olds. Sales have since rocketed and the book is now the second best-selling French-language book on
Amazon. Copé's remarks have been widely mocked by in French media. The French are, after all, supposed to be relaxed about nudity; there is hardly a French movie without a nude scene; and French advertisers use female bodies (always
perfect) to sell everything from cars to pasta. All this would be mildly amusing if the remarks were not part of a campaign to radicalise the political debate in France along moral and cultural "identity" lines. Copé was trying,
clumsily, to hitch himself to a bandwagon launched in recent months by ultra-Catholic conservatives and by the extreme nationalist right. Update: French booksellers pose naked to support children's book on nudity
27th
February 2013. See article from
theguardian.com After a children's book showing people naked was attacked by politicans of France's UMP party, a group of publishers and booksellers decided to register
their displeasure, by posing naked (apart from strategically placed books that is). Jean-François Copé appeared on television earlier this month to denounce Tous à Poil, a children's picture book in which characters
including a policeman and a school teacher are shown getting undressed, and naked, before plunging into the sea. The authors, Claire Franek and Marc Daniau, wrote it to take the shame out of being naked. But Copé, president of France's
centre-right Union pour un Mouvement Populaire party, said that when he saw the book, he was outraged. His comments backfired, sending the book racing to the top of bestseller lists in France, and drawing widespread condemnation, with minister for
education Vincent Peillon calling Copé a spokesperson for extremist groups. . |
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Prescriptive Hindus get book banned after taking easy offence
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| 24th February
2014
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| 12th February 2014. See article from telegraph.co.uk |
The publisher Penguin has been accused of cowardice after it agreed to withdraw and pulp all remaining copies of a widely-acclaimed book on Hinduism to settle a civil claim from a Hindu extremist group. The book, The Hindus, An Alternative
History , by respected American academic Wendy Doniger, was published in 2009 ironically to try and offset the view that the religion is prescriptive and shame-based and to reveal compassionate and tolerant roots. But it provoked an angry
response from Hindu extremist groups who said it took a Christian missionary approach to denigrate the faith and defamed revered religious characters. Soon after its publication, a civil case was launched by six complainants led by Dina
Nath Batra. Doniger's book had intended to show the Hindu religion in a poor light and had been disrespectful of its Gods and Goddesses, he argued. His group's claim cited the book's cover jacket which shows Lord Krishna sitting on the
buttocks of a naked woman, surrounded by naked women. He claimed that the picture had attempted to ridicule, humiliate and defame the Hindus and denigrate the Hindu traditions . Penguin was accused of surrender and cowardice
by commentators and freedom of expression campaigners after copies of the settlement were released. Under the terms of the deal, Penguin agreed to stop the distribution and sale of the book in India and destroy all remaining copies of the book. In
exchange, Batra and his fellow litigants agreed to drop all civil and criminal cases against the publisher. Doniger told friends in India she was angry about the settlement and indicated she had not been consulted about it in advance. She said For all the people who have expressed outrage over this, I am deeply grateful,
she told friends by email. She said she did not believe it would be possible to stop people buying the book online, although it did not appear possible today to purchase the book on Amazon from India or via local rivals.
Update: Calling for Penguin to oppose the censorship 24th February 2013. See article from
bbc.co.uk A group of leading Indian and international academics, including Ashis Nandy, Partha Chatterjee, Romila Thapar and Martha Nussbaum, have initiated a petition on
change.org urging Penguin to: Contest the suit against The Hindus through the higher courts, to ensure that a strong precedent upholding freedom of expression be established.
The petition also urged
lawmakers, jurists and the legal bureaucracy to undertake a revision of Indian penal laws to protect works of serious academic and artistic merit from motivated, malicious and frivolous litigation . |
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Politician adds prudery to political correctness over children's book with nude drawings of ordinary people
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| 16th February 2014
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| Thanks to Therumbler See
article from
independent.co.uk |
A strange prudishness has seized a section of political opinion in France. The leader of the main centre-right opposition party, Jean-François Copé, declared on television last week that his "blood ran cold" when he read a
children's book called Tous à poil ( All in the Buff ). The book has comical drawings of ordinary people, policemen, bakers, and teachers, taking off their clothes. Its aim is to teach small children not to be obsessed with perfect
bodies. According to Copé, the book is being forced on primary school children as part of a campaign by an ideologically rigid socialist government to subvert traditional attitudes to gender and the family. Tous à poil
had sold only 1,000 copies before Copé's comments on television made it sound like a blend of the Marquis de Sade and Karl Marx for five-year-olds. Sales have since rocketed and the book is now the second best-selling French-language book on
Amazon. Copé's remarks have been widely mocked by in French media. The French are, after all, supposed to be relaxed about nudity; there is hardly a French movie without a nude scene; and French advertisers use female bodies (always
perfect) to sell everything from cars to pasta. All this would be mildly amusing if the remarks were not part of a campaign to radicalise the political debate in France along moral and cultural "identity" lines. Copé was trying,
clumsily, to hitch himself to a bandwagon launched in recent months by ultra-Catholic conservatives and by the extreme nationalist right. |
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Telegraph culture editor calls for BBFC style age classification for sweary books (and so most likely to be 15 rated)
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| 8th February 2014
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| See article from telegraph.co.uk |
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Koran unbanned in Russia
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| 1st February 2014
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| See article from forum18.org
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A Krasnodar court has overturned a ban on a popular Russian translation of the Koran (though the court has still not issued the written ruling), while a Tver court has overturned a ban in Russia on the main Jehovah's Witness international website. Yet
bans on religious literature amid controversial extremism accusations continue, Forum 18 News Service notes. Four more Jehovah's Witness texts were ruled extremist in December 2013. And no moves have taken place to lift a less publicised
extremism ban on 68 Islamic texts, Nirzhigit Dolubayev, a lawyer representing one of the publishers in the case, told Forum 18. Fines continue on mosques and individuals for possessing any of the 68 books - which include collections of hadiths
[sayings of the religious character Mohammed]. |
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New Zealand book censors raise rating of prize winning children's book to R14 on nutter appeal
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| 19th January 2014
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| See article
from classificationoffice.govt.nz See also
head of review board wanted an R18 rating from nzherald.co.nz
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Into the River is a book by New Zealand author Ted Dawe. In September 2013 it was classified as unrestricted by the Classification Office after being submitted by the Department of Internal Affairs because of a complaint from a member of the
public. An application was made to the Film and Literature Board of Review for a review of the Classification Office's decision. The Board of Review classified the book as R14. The novel is centred on Te
Arepa Santos, a boy from a fictional village on the East Coast of the North Island in New Zealand/Aotearoa. He wins a scholarship to a boys' boarding school in Auckland, and the transition is difficult. He forges friendships, finds enemies, and discovers
that his Maori identity is discounted and a disadvantage. He endures the bullying that comes from this, as well as that meted out to new boys, and sees what happens when that bullying goes too far. There are confusing encounters with sex and a growing
understanding of intimacy, the use of drugs, peer pressure, deep racism, grief and death. Decision summary The Film and Literature Board of Review noted in its decision that the book contains themes of bullying, underage casual
and unsafe sex, drug taking and other matters that people may find offensive and upsetting. The Board considered that the book is likely to educate and inform young adults about the potentially negative consequences that can follow from involvement in
casual sex, underage drinking, drug taking, crime, violence and bullying. The Board also considered that the book serves a useful social purpose in raising these issues for thought and debate and creating a context which may help young adults think more
deeply about the immediate and long term consequences of choices they may be called upon to make. However, there are scenes in the book that are powerful and disturbing, and in the opinion of the Board run a real risk of shocking
and disturbing young readers. Whilst those aged 14 and above are likely to have a level of maturity that enables them to deal with this, those below the age of 14 may not. The Film and Literature Board of Review classified the
book as objectionable except if the publication is restricted to persons who have attained the age of 14 years. The Board also requires that any further publications of the book carry the same descriptive note as the present publication, reading parental advisory explicit content
. The Board of Review decision replaces the one by the Classification Office. It is illegal for anyone, including parents and guardians, to supply Into the River to anyone under the age of 14. Family First national
director Bob McCoskrie, who lodged the complaint about the book, said it was disappointing a restricted work was an award-winning children's book.
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By banning a book written by a political prisoner
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| 18th
January 2014
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| See article from
indexoncensorship.org
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According to Belarusian authorities, a book by political prisoner Ales Bialiatski can damage the image of the country. Bialiatski is serving four-and-a-half years in prison, nominally for tax evasion, but the international community see his prison
sentence as punishment for his principled stance in support of human rights. In July 2013 Customs confiscated 40 copies of Bialiatski's book Enlightened by Belarus , as they were being transferred from Lithuania, where they had been published,
to Belarus. The book has been included on a blacklist of goods that are barred from the territory of the Customs Union of Belarus, Russia and Kazakhstan. After it was first inspected, authorities concluded it could be harmful for the image of the
Republic of Belarus . Enlightened by Belarus is a collection of essays on the history of the Belarusian literature. Several essays contain critical assessments of literary works by Belarusian political prisoners, like Uladzimir
Niakliaeu and Aliaksandr Fiaduta. Ales introduced a notion of 'Belarusian prison literature'. In fact his book points out that for decades writers in Belarus have been persecuted and put in prisons, from the times of the Czar Russia and Soviet
repression, to present day, says Tatsiana Raviaka, adding that the state censors cannot allow free distribution of the views on the literary process presented in Bialiatski's book. She and her colleagues from Human Rights Centre Viasna are going to
appeal the ban. |
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Hitler's Mein Kampf has become an internet best seller, causing a few alarm bells to ring
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| 17th January
2014
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| See article from
israelnationalnews.com |
Adolf Hitler's Mein Kampf has becoming an exceedingly successful international e-book bestseller. Originally published in 1925, the Nazi ideology has become a bona fide online sensation, writes Fox News , topping Amazon's
Propaganda & Political Psychology section. Chris Faraone of Vocativ.com wrote that for about a year now, Hitler's book has been on the list of best-sellers on iTunes, where and that currently two different digital versions of the book rank 12th
and 15th on the Politics & Current Events chart. In January 2013, a 99 cent Kindle version began to do well among World War II books and Historical Biographies & Memoirs. Its publisher, a California company called Elite Minds Inc.,told
Vocativ , Sales are great, but noted that he faces a moral dilemma in promotion in that he fears advocating something that could be misused. Vocativ speculated that Mein Kampf's popularity on the Internet is connected to the
anonymous nature of e-purchases, and to curiosity. I think I waited 45 years to read Hitler's words, writes one reviewer. Another sums it up thusly: Curiosity killed me to get this book. Since showing up in Asia 15 years ago, Mein
Kampf has sold in excess of 100,000 copies in India. In 2005, the debut of the first-ever Turkish translation sold 100,000 copies in the first two months. Rabbi Abraham Cooper, associate dean of the Simon Wiesenthal Center in Los Angeles, thinks
online sellers should only sell annotated versions of the book. We know that the facts of life are that you cannot censor any idea from the Internet, it's simply impossible, Cooper told FoxNews.com . But an annotated version is important for
someone who doesn't know the context of the time and so that they're not reading pure genocidal hate. The glorification of Hitler, Cooper claims, is being seen among Muslims and Arabs in the Netherlands, Lebanon, Turkey, Egypt, Thailand,
Japan, India and South Korea. |
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Muslim extremists burn down historic library after being offended by a pamphlet left in one of the books
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| 6th January 2014
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| See article from
huffingtonpost.co.uk |
Ancient books in a historic library in the Lebanese city of Tripoli have been torched by extremist muslims, after a pamphlet supposedly insulting religion was found inside one of the books. Security sources say that up to 78,000 books, many
irreplaceable ancient Muslim and Christian texts and manuscripts, are now unsalvageable. The Al-Saeh library in the Serali neighborhood was set a-blaze after a local gang to objection to a sheet apparently insulting to the religious character
Mohammed, found hidden in the pages of one of the library books. The library's curator, Greek Orthodox priest Ibrahim Sarrouj, received threats from unidentified people who accused him of writing the article, according the Jordan News Agency.
Lebanese Prime Minister Najib Mikati condemned the arson attack: We denounce the burning of the library and reject any harm being done to Tripoli and its people, as it has been, and will remain, the city of the
world and of intellectuals.
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