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in Features, Speaking Up

PEN International calls on India to safeguard freedom of expression as the 84th PEN Congress closes in Pune, India

byPen International
October 1, 2018
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PEN International calls on India to safeguard freedom of expression as the 84th PEN Congress closes in Pune, India
Image Courtesy: PEN International


In recent years India’s climate for free expression has severely deteriorated, with writers, journalists and social media users finding themselves increasingly under attack, PEN International said today. The 29th of September marks the final day of the 84th PEN International Congress, which includes writers from over 80 countries.

Each year, PEN International prepares a freedom of expression report on the country in which its Congress is being held.

The report – India: Pursing truth in the face of intolerance – outlines how dissenting voices, be they journalists, writers, academics or students face intimidation, harassment, prosecution, online abuse, and physical violence.

Salil Tripathi, Writers in Prison Committee Chair said: ‘Laws that stifle speech; an environment hostile to dissenting views; and emboldened critics online and in the real world have cast a chill over free expression in India. Journalists and writers have been sued, intimidated, threatened, and sometimes murdered. There is little political will to amend the laws that prevent free expression or to enforce laws that protect the writer. As our report shows, there are courageous women and men exercising their right to live their lives as Tagore wanted Indians to live – in a land where the mind is without fear and the head is held high – into that heaven of freedom may India awake, as it celebrates Mahatma Gandhi’s 150-year anniversary.

'Tagore also said he yearned for a dawn where the world has not been broken into fragments by narrow domestic walls – rising majoritarian nationalism does just that and takes India further away from what it was meant to be.’

Gathering together the voices of writers, journalists, lawyers and academics, the report illustrates the varied ways in which critical voices are targeted and silenced: from the use of overbroad laws; directed attacks online and offline; the systematic stifling of academic research and freedom; and the continued marginalisation of and hostility towards women’s voices.

PEN International President Jennifer Clement said: ‘We have been so honoured to be here with our global membership, meet so many wonderful Indian writers and honour the life and legacy of Mohandas Gandhi and his wife Kasturba. While this gathering has been about the promotion of peace-building and celebrating the power of the written word, it is also about protecting free expression and remembering those of us who pay the ultimate price for exercising this fundamental right. Today we honour Gauri Lankesh, who was shot to death outside her home a year ago. Even though we welcome the progress that has been in the investigation, we’re still waiting for justice. Unless the cycle of impunity is broken, those who want to use violence to silence will be embolden to do so.’

PEN International calls on the Indian authorities to protect its writers, journalists and all others exercising their right to free expression and to bring its legislation in line with its obligations under international law.

Closing the 84th PEN Congress, Ganesh Devy, Director of the Congress said: 'The first PEN Congress in India since PEN was established 97 years ago, with the presence of writers from 87 countries and representatives of several hundred languages has been a phenomenal experience. The dialogue between writers on truth, freedom and diversity has been very rich. The Congress has also presented a project of translating 100 Indian books into the languages of the world and vice versa. The PEN congress has been a fabulous curtain raiser for the 150th year of Gandhi and Kasturba.'


 

First published in PEN International.

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