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Total recall
Defeating the thought police In a local radio interview, Kalim Siddiqui said: ``I do not want to kill him. We will just break every bone in his body.'' ``If this man does not leave the centre stage and if he doesn't stop insulting us, then ultimately we will have to come and get him.'' Sunday was the fourth anniversary of the fatwah, or religious decree, by the late Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Khomeini in 1989, ordering Rushdie to be killed for ``blasphemy'' contained in his novel, The Satanic Verses. In Teheran, Iran's current spiritual leader, Ayatollah Ali Khameini, called on Sunday for the author to be handed over so that the decree could be carried out. Iran insists the fatwah can only be repealed by the man who issued it Khomeini. Which position,the foreign office here said, says is ``clearly unhelpful'' in efforts to improve bilateral relations. In a surprise appearance at a chapel at Cambridge University, northeast of London, Rushdie denounced the fatwah as a ``terrorist threat''. The novelist has lately emerged more often from hiding to urge world leaders to pressure Iran into lifting the fatwah. On Friday, Rushdie, appearing on the US Cable New Network (CNN), said he was more optimistic that Iran would be forced to abandon the death sentence against him because of the changing attitude of the rest of the world. The world may not be behind him, but a few governments are now coming to his aid. In an editorial on the fourth anniversary of the fatwah, The Washington Post, quoting Rushdie, said the British have informed the Iranians that full diplomatic relations can never be resumed until the sentence is revoked. It said: ``If a man be condemned to death for words in a book and, furthermore, if the outlaw regime of one country can beallowed to order a terrorist attack on a man in another, just because it hates his views civilised governments cannot wink at the outrage.'' The Iranian government said, the Post, ``maintains conveniently that the decree can't be revoked because the issuer (Khomeini) is dead, and a government-supported ``foundation'' in Teheran meanwhile continues to offer $2 million in blood-money for anyone who kills Rushdie.'' FOR his part, Rushdie is determined not to allow the fatwah to so completely dominate his day-to-day life anymore. The author has been speaking out frequently, publicly and with increasing force. ``It's taken the government four years to realise that the softly-softly approach does not work,'' he said recently. ``I regret I kept my mouth shut for so long. I allowed the other side to set the agenda.'' And as he set about completing his latest novel, The Moor's Last Sigh, Rushdie has at last snatched the initiative in this sordid episode and clearly chosen his side. As he recently said:``At one time, I would have failed Norman Tebbit's immigration test (which side do you cheer when it's India versus England). I think I'd now cheer for England. No doubt, India's loss has been Britain's gain. Excerpted from reports carried in `Indian Express' in February'93 Copyright © 2000 Indian Express Newspapers (Bombay) Ltd.
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