London: Booker Prize-winning author Salman Rushdie has warned against the alarming threats to freedom of expression around the world, including in India, as he accepted the Freedom to Publish honour at the British Book Awards, known as the Nibbies, in London. In a video message from New York on Monday night, the 75-year-old Mumbai-born author who has lived under the shadow of a fatwa since The Satanic Verses' was published in the 1980s said it was important to continue to fight for the freedom to express and to publish.
We live in a moment, I think, at which freedom of expression, freedom to publish has not in my lifetime been under such threat in the countries of the West, said Rushdie in his first public address since a knife attack on him in August last year. Obviously, there are parts of the world where censorship has been prevalent for a long-time, quite a lot of the world Russia, China, in some ways India as well. But in the countries of the West, until recently, there was a fair measure of freedom in the area of publishing, he said.
Now I am sitting here in the US, I have to look at the extraordinary attack on libraries and books for children in schools; the attack on the idea of libraries themselves. It's quite remarkably alarming, and we need to be very aware of it and fight against it very hard, he added. Sporting an eye patch on his right eye, which was injured in the life-threatening knife attack, the British American novelist also called on publishers who bowdlerise classic works of authors like Roald Dahl and Ian Fleming to resist that pressure and allow books to come to us from their time and be of their time, because anyone who does not agree with that sentiment can choose not to read those books.