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PEN NEWSROOM

Following is an archive of press releases and letters issued by PEN American Center, listed by year. Please contact us if you have any questions about these releases.

2008 | 2007 | 2006 | 2005 | 2004 | 2003 | 2002 | 2001

2008


May 12, 2008
Chen Daojun Detained as Crackdown Intensifies in China During Olympic Torch Relay

May 12, 2008Chen Daojun Detained as Crackdown Intensifies in China During Olympic Torch Relay Chen Daojun, a freelance writer and journalist, has been detained on suspicion of “inciting subversion of state power,” the second writer jailed on subversion charges in a week in what PEN is calling “an intensified effort to silence dissent” as the Olympic Games approach.
May 6, 2008:
Chinese Authorities Detain Writer Zhou Yuanzhi

May 6, 2008:Chinese Authorities Detain Writer Zhou Yuanzhi Zhou Yuanzhi, a writer and member of the Independent Chinese PEN Center, has been detained in connection with his writings and could face trial for inciting subversion.
April 30, 2008:
PEN Writer and Chinese Citizen Yu Zhang Denied Entry to Hong Kong

April 30, 2008:PEN Writer and Chinese Citizen Yu Zhang Denied Entry to Hong Kong 101 days before the Olympics, Hong Kong officials refused to allow distinguished Chinese journalist Dr. Yu Zhang, Secretary-General of the Independent Chinese PEN Center, into the country, where he was invited to chair a session at a World Press Freedom Day Conference.
April 24, 2008:
PEN Calls Press Conference to Announce Delivery of China Petition

April 24, 2008:PEN Calls Press Conference to Announce Delivery of China Petition Salman Rushdie, Francine Prose, Edward Albee, Rick Moody and Ma Jian will be among the writers attending a press conference Thursday, May 1, at which PEN will announce the delivery later that morning of a petition to the Chinese Mission to the United Nations.
April 18, 2008:
PEN Denounces Detention of Jamyang Kyi

April 18, 2008:PEN Denounces Detention of Jamyang Kyi Jamyang Kyi, a prominent Tibetan writer, reporter, activist and singer, has been detained in Qinghai Province, raising the number of writers imprisoned in China to 39.
April 11, 2008:
Yang Tongyan to Receive 2008 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award

April 11, 2008:Yang Tongyan to Receive 2008 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award PEN American Center today named Chinese dissident writer Yang Tongyan, who is currently serving a 12-year prison sentence, as recipient of its 2008 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award.>> More
April 11, 2008:
V.A. Nurse to Receive 2008 PEN/Katherine Anne Porter First Amendment Award

April 11, 2008:V.A. Nurse to Receive 2008 PEN/Katherine Anne Porter First Amendment Award PEN American Center has named Laura Berg, a Veterans Administration nurse who faced a sedition investigation after writing a letter to the editor of her local paper criticizing the Bush Administration’s handling of the disaster and the Iraq War, as the recipient of this year’s prestigious PEN/Katherine Anne Porter First Amendment Award.
April 10, 2008:
Zhu Yufu Receives Tougher Sentence After Re-Trial

April 10, 2008:Zhu Yufu Receives Tougher Sentence After Re-Trial Nine months after trying and sentencing internet writer and activist Zhu Yufu to two years in prison for “obstructing the police from carrying out their public duty,” a Chinese court has re-tried the dissident and added two years, four months and 26 days’ deprivation of political rights after release to his original sentence.
April 9, 2008:
Billy Collins Reads Shi Tao’s “June” as Part of Free Expression Poem Relay

As the Olympic torch reached the U.S., PEN American Center today released a recording of former U.S. Poet Laureate and PEN American Center Vice President Billy Collins reading imprisoned Chinese writer Shi Tao’s poem “June,” a meditation on the 1989 protests and massacre.
April 3, 2008:
Hu Jia Sentenced to 3 1/2 Years for “Inciting Subversion”

April 3, 2008:Hu Jia Sentenced to 3 1/2 Years for “Inciting Subversion” Leading Chinese human rights, environmental, and AIDS activist Hu Jia was today sentenced to three and a half years in prison for “inciting subversion of state power.” A freelance journalist and blogger, Hu was tried in a four-hour proceeding on March 18, 2008 in the Beijing Municipal No. 1 Intermediate People's Court. Hu Jia, his two defense lawyers, and his wife and mother were present at this morning’s sentencing hearing.
March 31, 2008:
British Author Sebastian Horsley Refused Entry to U.S.

March 31, 2008: British Author Sebastian Horsley Refused Entry to U.S. PEN American Center is appealing to the Departments of Homeland Security and State to review the exclusion of British author Sebastian Horsley from the United States, calling the decision of Customs officials to bar him from entering the country on grounds of “moral turpitude” a “dangerous precedent that could be extended to bar scores of literary figures from a number of countries.”
March 18, 2008:
Trial Reinforces Fears Hu Jia Is Being Silenced for His Writings

March 18, 2008: Trial Reinforces Fears Hu Jia Is Being Silenced for His Writings PEN American Center today called reports of the trial of prominent activist and writer Hu Jia “extremely troubling and discouraging,” saying the proceedings apparently did nothing but underscore the fact that Hu is being prosecuted for his writings and public statements in clear violation of Chinese and international law. >> More
March 18, 2008:
On Fifth Anniversary of Cuba's Black Spring, 28 Writers Still Imprisoned

March 18, 2008:  On Fifth Anniversary of Cuba's Black Spring, 28 Writers Still Imprisoned Five years after Cuba jailed 75 prominent dissidents in what has been called that country’s “Black Spring,” PEN American Center today appealed for the release of 28 imprisoned writers, journalists and librarians, saying Cuba’s decision to sign key human rights treaties last month should quickly be matched by tangible human rights improvements. >> More
March 17, 2008:
PEN to China: Let Free Press Tell True Story in Tibet

March 17, 2008: PEN to China: Let Free Press Tell True Story in Tibet Writers from Canada, the United States, and China joined today in denouncing “suffocating restrictions” on the press and on the flow of information from Tibet, where a week of protests and repression has reportedly resulted in as many as 100 deaths in Lhasa and other Tibetan cities. >> More
March 11, 2008:
Charges Against Turkmen Writer Dropped

March 11, 2008: Charges Against Turkmen Writer Dropped After having spent the large majority of the past two years in exile, novelist, historian, Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty correspondent and 2006 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award winner Rakhim Esenov has been allowed to return home to Turkmenistan. >> More
March 8, 2008:
International Women's Day: Women Writing Under Surveillance in China

March 8, 2008: International Women's Day: Women Writing Under Surveillance in China International PEN is marking International Women’s Day on March 8 by celebrating the work of three women writers under threat in China: Zeng Jinyan, Tsering Woeser and Li Jianhong. [More]
February 8, 2008: Yu Huafeng Released from Prison in China
February 8, 2008: Yu Huafeng Released from Prison in China PEN American Center welcomes the early release of Yu Huafeng, Deputy Editor-in-chief and general manager of the Guangzhou-based daily Nanfang Dushi Bao (Southern Metropolis News). Yu, who was arrested January 14, 2004 for alleged financial irregularities, was initially sentenced to 12 years in prison. >> More
February 6, 2008:
PEN Applauds New Law Expanding Iraqi Refugee Processing

February 6, 2008: PEN Applauds New Law Expanding Iraqi Refugee Processing President Bush has signed PEN-supported legislation that requires the United States to expand programs to resettle Iraqi refugees in the U.S., removing some of the major barriers that have left thousands of Iraqi writers, journalists, and translators stranded and vulnerable in Iraq and neighboring countries. >> More
February 5, 2008: Two Releases, One Conviction, One Indefinite Detention
February 5, 2008: Two Releases, One Conviction, One Indefinite Detention PEN today welcomed the release on parole of Hong Kong-based journalist Ching Cheong from prison in Gangzhou, southern China, where he was serving a five-year sentence for espionage. The Singapore Straits Times reporter’s release, two years before his sentence was due to expire, was the second within the past week. >> More
February 1, 2008:
James Risen Subpoenaed over Source for Book

February 1, 2008: James Risen Subpoenaed over Source for Book PEN American Center today expressed concern over reports that Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times journalist has been issued a subpoena in an effort to compel him to reveal confidential sources for information published in his 2006 book State of War: The Secret History of the CIA and the Bush Administration. >> More
January 28, 2008:
Pamuk Prosecutor Arrested, Charged in Plot

January 28, 2008:Pamuk Prosecutor Arrested, Charged in Plot Kemal Kerincsiz, the lawyer who tried to prosecute Orhan Pamuk, Hrant Dink, Elif Shafak, and several other writers for “insulting Turkishness,” has been arrested with 32 others following an investigation into a weapons cache discovered in Istanbul last year. >> More
January 28 | Bloomberg | Mother of Jailed Writer to Sit With First Lady at Bush Speech
January 28 | Bloomberg | Mother of Jailed Writer to Sit With First Lady at Bush Speech Blanca González, whose son, Normando Hernández González, has become an international symbol of Cuban human-rights abuses, is scheduled to join Laura Bush in the first lady's gallery tonight when President George W. Bush delivers his final State of the Union address. >> More
January 18, 2008:
PEN Marks First Anniversary of Murder of Armenian-Turkish Journalist

 January 18, 2008:PEN Marks First Anniversary of Murder of Armenian-Turkish Journalist PEN is supporting the “Hrant Için, Adalet Için” (For Hrant, For Justice) campaign organized by a consortium of Turkish organizations staging events in Istanbul in commemoration of Hrant Dink, the Armenian-Turkish journalist who was shot dead outside his office in Istanbul on January 19, 2007. >> More
January 16, 2008:
PEN Concerned About Terms of Release of Cyber-Dissident in China

January 16, 2008:PEN Concerned About Terms of Release of Cyber-Dissident in China After one month in detention, Chinese internet writer and dissident Wang Dejia (pen name Jing Chu) was released on January 12, 2008 after agreeing not to write anything political for one year. >> More
January 3, 2008:
Activist Hu Jia Arrested in China: Number of Jailed Writers Rises to 42

January 3, 2008: Activist Hu Jia Arrested in China: Number of Jailed Writers Rises to 42 The arrest last week of high-profile activist and blogger Hu Jia in Beijing is raising concerns that the Chinese government may be ratcheting up its efforts to control internal dissent in the months leading up to the 2008 Beijing Olympics. >> More
2007

December 21, 2007:
Chinese Police Preventing Prominent Chinese Writers from Meeting in Beijing

Chinese police have detained two writers and issued warnings and posted guards outside the homes of dozens of others to prevent the Independent Chinese PEN Center from holding an informal awards dinner tomorrow night in Beijing. >> More
December 20, 2007:
PEN Condemns New Detention of Cyber-Dissident in China

PEN Condemns New Detention of Cyber-Dissident in China: 231 Days Before the Olympics, Number of Jailed Writers Rises to 41. >> More
December 10, 2007: PEN's Letter to Chinese Government
We are writing on behalf of our members and the entire community of International PEN, the worldwide association of writers, to urge you to release 40 of our colleagues who are in prison in your country in violation of their right to freedom of expression.
December 10, 2007:
Writers Demand Release of Jailed Colleagues Before Beijing Olympics

World-renowned writers from China and North America marked International Human Rights Day today by launching 40:242 – We are Ready For Freedom of Expression, a campaign that challenges the Chinese government to release all of the writers and journalists it is holding in prisons before the August 8, 2008 opening of the Olympic Games. >> More
November 15, 2007:
Day of the Imprisoned Writer

Each year, PEN monitors around 1,000 attacks against writers, journalists, poets, publishers, and editors worldwide. These threats range from persistent harassment to prison sentences and killings. The past year has been no different, with hundreds of writers and journalists detained, and over 40 killed in the practice of their professions.>> More
November 15, 2007:
Yahoo Settles Civil Lawsuit with Families of Chinese Cyber-dissidents

PEN American Center today welcomed the news that Yahoo has settled a lawsuit brought by families of Shi Tao and Wang Xiaoning, two Chinese cyber-dissidents who were jailed for their writings after Yahoo revealed their identities to the Chinese government. >> More
November 12, 2007:
Announcing $10,000 Award for First Amendment Defender

PEN American Center and the Katherine Anne Porter Foundation today unveiled a new $10,000 prize for ordinary people who take extraordinary stands to defend the First Amendment in the United States.>> More
October 31, 2007:
PEN Urges Senators to Insist on Clear Rejection of Abusive Interrogations

Disturbed by the reluctance of attorney general nominee Michael Mukasey to speak clearly and forcefully against torture and other forms of cruel and inhumane treatment during his confirmation hearings in the U.S. Senate, PEN is urging senators to demand clarifications and insist that approval of his nomination be contingent on a repudiation of illegal, abusive interrogations. >> More
October 29, 2007:
China Releases Tibetan Monk from Prison After 18 Years

PEN American Center today hailed the release of Ven. Ngawang Phulchung, a senior monk of Drepung Monastery in the Tibetan capital of Lhasa who was jailed in 1989 for publishing literature critical of the Chinese occupation of Tibet. >> More
October 24 | Bloomberg | Abused Cuban Journalist, Spirit Strong, Worsening in Hospital
Imprisoned Cuban journalist Normando Hernandez Gonzalez, hospitalized last month, faces medical procedures today that family members said could further imperil his already fragile health. >> More
October 23, 2007:
House Foreign Affairs Committee Unanimously Passes Global Online Freedom Act

PEN American Center today praised the House Foreign Affairs Committee's unanimous vote in favor of the Global Online Freedom Act of 2007, and urged Congress to move swiftly to enact a bill it says is essential to ensure American internet service providers do not assist regimes that suppress free expression on the internet and persecute cyber-dissidents. >> More
October 17, 2007:
House Passes Historic Federal Shield Law: Bill Protects Public’s Right to Know

PEN American Center reacted with elation to yesterday’s bipartisan 398-21 vote in the House of Representatives in favor of the Free Flow of Information Act of 2007, calling the House’s action an essential clarification of the right of journalists to protect confidential sources and an overwhelming affirmation of our country’s bedrock commitment to freedom of the press. >> More
October 12, 2007:
China Cracks Down on Media on Eve of Party Congress

PEN American Center today expressed alarm over tightening controls on the media in advance of the 17th Congress of the Chinese Communist Party, which opens Monday in Beijing. >> More
October 1, 2007:
PEN, Co-Plaintiffs Settle OFAC Lawsuit; Publishers Free to Issue Work from Cuba, Iran, and Sudan
PEN joined publishing industry co-plaintiffs today in announcing that they have successfully resolved their lawsuit against the Treasury Department’s Office of Foreign Assets Control (“OFAC”). >> More
September 25, 2007: PEN Applauds Introduction of NSL Reform Act
The Campaign for Reader Privacy, a coalition of organizations representing librarians, booksellers, publishers, and authors, cheered the introduction today of legislation to safeguard the privacy of ordinary Americans and curb the FBI’s abuse of the National Security Letter power granted under the USA Patriot Act. >> More
September 21, 2007:
Iran Frees Scholar Kian Tajbakhsh

PEN American Center welcomed the release of Kian Tajbakhsh, a social scientist and urban planner who was arrested at his home in Tehran on or about May 11, 2007, and held in Evin prison. >> More
August 21, 2007:
PEN Welcomes Release of Haleh Esfandiari in Iran; Awaits News of Kian Tajbakhsh

PEN American Center welcomed today’s release on bail of Dr. Haleh Esfandiari, Director of the Middle East program for the Woodrow Wilson International Center for Scholars and also a dual U.S. and Iranian citizen. >> More
July 26, 2007:
PEN Hails Release of Tunisian Writer Who Denounced Torture

PEN American Center hailed the release this week of Mohammed Abbou, an Internet writer, lawyer, and human rights activist who was arrested on March 1, 2005, for an article published on the Internet nine months earlier that denounced torture in Tunisia. >> More
June 22, 2007:
PEN Honorary Member Nguyen Vu Binh Released in Vietnam

PEN welcomes the early release on June 9, 2007 of Vietnamese journalist Nguyen Vu Binh. >> More
June 22, 2007:
PEN American Center Urges Rejection of Academic Boycotts

PEN has released a statement of principle opposing academic and cultural boycotts, saying such actions threaten the internationally guaranteed right to freedom of expression. >> More
June 19, 2007:
PEN Praises Senate Bill on Iraqi Refugees

PEN applauded the introduction of legislation to accelerate and expand programs to resettle threatened Iraqi translators, journalists, and other vulnerable refugees in the United States, calling the Senate’s Refugee Crisis in Iraq Act “an important affirmation of our most basic values and the kind of approach the United States needs to take to this urgent and growing crisis.” >> More
May 25, 2007:
PEN Condemns New Arrests in Iran

PEN American Center has expressed alarm over the arrests of two prominent international scholars in Tehran. >> More
April 11, 2007:
Campaign for Reader Privacy Welcomes Testimony by 'Gagged' Librarian

Following dramatic testimony from a Connecticut librarian who successfully challenged an abusive FBI National Security Letter (NSL), the Campaign called on Congress to restore the safeguards for reader privacy that were eliminated by the USA Patriot Act. >> More
April 10, 2007:
Jailed Cuban Journalist to Receive PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award

PEN named Normando Hernández González, a Cuban writer and journalist who was arrested along with 74 other journalists and democracy and human rights activists in a March 2003 crackdown, as recipient of its 2007 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award. >> More
April 2, 2007:
Philip Roth Wins Inaugural PEN/Saul Bellow Award

Novelist Philip Roth will be the first recipient of a major new literary prize, the PEN/Saul Bellow Award for Achievement in American Fiction. With a stipend of $40,000, the Award is the largest of PEN’s literary prizes and will be conferred biennially. >> More
March 29, 2007:
In Congress, PEN Presses for Action on Iraqi Refugees

In testimony presented to Congress this week, journalist and PEN Trustee George Packer urged the U.S. government to clarify and streamline the process for resettling Iraqis targeted for death for perceived “collaboration” with American and western organizations. >> More
March 20, 2007:
PEN American Center Elects Francine Prose as New President

PEN announced today the election of Francine Prose, the acclaimed novelist, short-story writer, and essayist, as its next president. >> More
March 8, 2007:
International Women’s Day

Over 60 women writers and journalists have come under attack for the practice of their right to freedom of expression in the past year. On March 8, 2007, International Women’s Day, PEN commemorates those women who have come under attack for the practice of their professions. >> More
February 28, 2007:
PEN, Co-Plaintiffs File New Challenge to “Ideological Exclusion”

Responding to the United States government’s most recent explanation for denying a visa to Tariq Ramadan, PEN American Center has joined with the American Academy of Religion, the American Association of University Professors, and the ACLE in filing a new motion in federal court to strike down a Patriot Act provision that allows the government to refuse entry to foreign scholars because of their political views. >> More
January 19, 2007:
PEN Alarmed by Murder of Armenian-Turkish Journalist

PEN is appalled by the news of the murder of Armenian-Turkish journalist and PEN Honorary Member Hrant Dink, who was shot dead outside his office in Istanbul on January 19. >> More
2006

November 30, 2006:
Free Speech Groups Urge Court to Reject FCC Censorship

New standards adopted by the Federal Communications Commission to censor “indecency” on the airwaves are overly vague and unconstitutional, a coalition of 20 free speech organizations, community broadcasters, filmmakers, performers and writers argued in a legal brief filed today. >> More
November 28, 2006:
Call for a repeal of Article 301 in Turkey

To ensure that PEN’s concerns are heard at this stage of the debate, International PEN issued a joint statement with Article 19 and the International Publisher’s Association calling for the repeal of Article 301. >> More
November 15, 2006:
Day of the Imprisoned Writer

PEN marks the the 26th Writers in Prison Day with a campaign in defense of nearly 100 writers and journalists around the world who are in prison or facing custodial sentences for alleged defamation or "insult." >> More
October 13, 2006:
PEN alarmed at recent crackdown on writers in China

Three writers, Zhang Jianhong, Yang Maodong, and Chen Shuqing, all members of Independent Chinese PEN center (ICPC), have been detained in recent weeks. >> More
October 7, 2006:
PEN Statement on the Murder of Anna Politkovskaya in Russia

PEN is appalled by the news of the murder of renowned Russian journalist and author Anna Politkovskaya, who was found shot dead in an elevator in her apartment building in Moscow. >> More
October 3, 2006:
PEN delivers press freedom petition to Congress

Ron Chernow brought PEN’s concerns over surveillance and threats against the press to Washington last week, opening a National Press Club program that revealed how far government is reaching into the lives and work of journalists, writers, and librarians. >> More
October 3, 2006:
Announcing the PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award for Nonfiction

This biennial prize will go to the author of a distinguished book of general nonfiction. >> More
September 26, 2006:
United States closes door again on Tariq Ramadan

The U.S. government has again blocked Tariq Ramadan from visiting the United States, this time after being ordered by a Federal District Judge to act on a visa application the Swiss-born Oxford University professor submitted last September. >> More
September 21, 2006:
PEN sounds alarm on threats against press in the U.S.

Troubled by recent attacks on newspapers and reporters for breaking stories on controversial antiterrorism programs, more than 1,100 PEN Members and supporters have signed a petition expressing concern over the climate for press freedom in the United States. >> More
September 21, 2006:
Author Elif Shafak acquitted in Turkey

Shafak was acquitted of charges at a hearing held in the Beyoglu Court of First Instance in Istanbul, bringing to a close one of the most prominent cases in a surge of legal proceedings against literary figures in Turkey. >> More
September 14, 2006:
Program to celebrate First Amendment champions

Eight individuals who have taken risky, at times harrowing stands on behalf of the First Amendment in recent months will discuss their experiences at an upcoming program in Washington, DC. >> More
September 14, 2006
PEN announces new Festival director after worldwide search

PEN announced today that Caro Llewellyn of Australia had been appointed Director of PEN World Voices: The New York Festival of International Literature. >> More
August 30, 2006:
PEN Welcomes Release of Ramin Jahanbegloo in Iran

PEN welcomed today’s release of Ramin Jahanbegloo, an Iranian writer and intellectual who was arrested at Tehran airport on April 27, 2006. >> More
Turkey Background Briefing: July 2006
Sometime in the next several months, Elif Shafak will appear before an Istanbul court on charges of “insulting Turkishness.” She will be the third prominent novelist to be hauled into court in Turkey in just over a year. >> More
July 24, 2006:
Akbar Ganji on Writing and Freedom of Expression in Iran

PEN welcomed Akbar Ganji, one of Iran's most prominent champions of human rights and freedom of expression, to New York City today to discuss writing, free expression, and recent developments in Iran. >> More
June 14, 2006:
PEN Welcomes Release of Algerian Newspaper Publisher, Mohammed Benchicou

Benchicou, who received one of two 2006 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards, was released this morning from El-Harrach Prison in Algiers. >> More
June 23, 2006:
PEN praises ruling in lawsuit challenging visa denials

PEN hailed a ruling challenging the U.S. government’s refusal to issue a visa to a prominent Muslim scholar, calling the court’s order to process Professor Tariq Ramadan’s visa application “a clear and articulate affirmation of the First Amendment rights of Americans. >> More
May 27, 2006:
PEN Congress reasserts the role of literature in a world without peace

Horst Köhler, Federal President of Germany, welcomed more than 450 writers from PEN Centres around the world to Berlin at the opening ceremony of International PEN’s annual Congress. >> More
May 3, 2006:
World Press Freedom Day

A free media helps to promote transparency and accountability in governance which are central to countering the corruption that is prevalent in so many countries around the world. >> More
April 17, 2006:
Turkmen Writer Defeats Travel Ban, Arrives in United States to Receive PEN Prize

Capping a week of high diplomatic drama, prominent Turkmen novelist and dissident Rakhim Esenov boarded a plane last night in Ashgabat, Turkmenistan to travel to the United States. >> More
April 14, 2006:
Turkmen Authorities Threatening to Prevent Writer from Accepting PEN Prize

PEN is protesting an attempt by the government of Turkeminstan to prevent prominent novelist and dissident Rakhim Esenov from traveling to New York to receive a 2006 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award. >> More
April 4, 2006:
PEN expresses alarm over detention of Gambian independent paper editor & manager

We are writing to express our alarm over the continued detention of Musa Saidykhan and Madi Ceesay, who have now been in custody for one week without being informed of the reasons. >> More
March 31, 2006:
Andrej Dynko released on expiry of sentence; prison diary published

Writer and journalist Andrej Dynko, arrested with hundreds of other protestors in the days surrounding the March 19th presidential elections, was freed today after serving a 10-day sentence. >> More
March 29, 2006:
PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award Winners

PEN named Mohammed Benchicou and Rakhim Esenov as recipients of its 2006 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards. >> More
March 29, 2006:
2006 PEN/Newman’s Own First Amendment Award

PEN has named Sibel Edmonds, a translator who was fired from her job at the FBI after complaining of intelligence failures and poor performance in her unit, as the recipient of this year’s prestigious PEN/Newman’s Own First Amendment Award. >> More
March 29, 2006:
Russian PEN at risk

PEN is deeply concerned about recent charges brought against Russian PEN that could force the center to close. >> More
March 28, 2006:
Egyptian Publisher to Receive Jeri Laber International Freedom to Publish Award

Egyptian publisher Mohamed Hashem, whose commitment to publishing works of critical thinking has brought him into conflict with civil and religious authorities, will receive this year’s Jeri Laber International Freedom to Publish Award. >> More
March 8, 2006:
International Women's Day

To mark International Women's Day on March 8, International PEN Writers in Prison Committee is focusing on the case of the Mexican writer and journalist Lydia Cacho. >> More
March 4, 2006:
International PEN Writers in Prison Committee meets in Istanbul

At meetings focusing on PEN's global program, the members planned the launch of a campaign against insult and criminal defamation laws under which writers and journalists are imprisoned worldwide, including Article 301 in Turkey. >> More
February 7, 2006:
PEN Protests Action Against Russian PEN Center

PEN American Center expressed alarm today that a Russian court has frozen all assets of the Russian PEN Center under allegations that the organization failed to pay land tax. >> More
January 25, 2006:
PEN Goes to Court to Challenge Patriot Act Exclusions of Foreign Scholars

PEN has joined in filing a lawsuit challenging a Patriot Act provision that can be used to bar prominent writers and scholars who are critical of U.S. policies from visiting the United States. >> More
January 25, 2006:
Campaign for Reader Privacy Sends Open Letter to Congress

PEN joined organizations representing booksellers, librarians, publishers, and writers today in delivering a letter to members of the House and Senate urging them not to re-authorize the sections of the USA PATRIOT Act that are due to expire on Feb. 3 without adding additional safeguards for the privacy of bookstore and library records. >> More
January 23, 2006:
PEN, Rushdie: Extend Pamuk Victory to Other Turkish Writers

PEN welcomed the news today that Turkish prosecutors will not proceed with a court case against novelist Orhan Pamuk, but cautioned that more than a dozen other writers and publishers are still being prosecuted under the same insult law. >> More
2005

December 23, 2005:
Patriot Act reauthorization blocked

Senate approved the U.S. House of Representative's last-minute changes to the Patriot Act reauthorization bill, reducing the Patriot Act extension from six months to five weeks. >> More
December 16, 2005:
PEN denounces postponement in Orhan Pamuk trial

PEN decried the suspension of trial proceedings against Turkish author Orhan Pamuk, calling the delay another way to prolong pressure on Pamuk and dozens of other writers and publishers currently being prosecuted in Turkey. >> More
Nov. 10, 2005:
Tenth anniversary of the death of Ken Saro-Wiwa

Writers around the world in International PEN are commemorating today the life and death of Nigerian writer Ken Saro Wiwa, who was executed ten years ago on November 10, 1995. >> More
November 10, 2005:
PEN Goes to Court for Documents on Visa Denials

PEN filed a lawsuit today to compel the Departments of State, Justice, and Homeland Security and the CIA to release documents on whether the United States bars prominent international figures from visiting the United States because of their political views. >> More
November 9, 2005:
Statement on sentencing of International PEN Vice President Predrag Matvejevic

The Writers in Prison Committee condemns the use of criminal defamation laws that led to the conviction of its vice president, Croatian writer Predrag Matvejevic. >> More
October 14, 2005:
PEN Writes to Senate Appropriations Committee

We are writing to you and your colleagues on the Defense Appropriations conference committee to urge you to ensure that the Senate amendment prohibiting the torture of prisoners in U.S. military custody remains in the final military spending bill. >> More
October 11, 2005:
PEN Launches Mexico Campaign

As agreed at the 71st International PEN Congress held in Bled in June 2005, the PEN Writers in Prison Committee is staging a campaign in October focusing on freedom of expression issues in Mexico.>> More
September 14, 2005:
Yahoo! information used to convict Chinese journalist

PEN is alarmed by evidence that information supplied by the Internet Service Provider Yahoo! Inc. was used to convict journalist, poet and dissident writer Shi Tao. >> More
September 2, 2005:
PEN Protests Charges Against Turkish Author Orhan Pamuk

PEN expressed shock today that world-famous Turkish writer Orhan Pamuk will be brought before an Istanbul court on December 16 and that he faces up to three years in prison for a comment published in a Swiss newspaper earlier this year. >> More
August 8, 2005:
PEN Hails Release of Saudi Reformers

PEN hailed the release today of Ali Al-Domaini, a leading Saudi literary figure who was one of three prominent intellectuals imprisoned for criticizing the pace and reach of human rights reforms in Saudi Arabia. >> More
July 25, 2005:
Writers condemn sentences against Saudi reformers, call for increased pressure

PEN expressed deep disappointment that an appeals court has upheld the harsh jail sentences against Saudi poet Ali Al-Domaini and two other reformists accused of petitioning for a constitutional monarchy in the conservative Muslim kingdom. >> More
June 16, 2005:
House passes Freedom to Read Amendment

Yesterday the House passed Rep. Bernie Sanders's (I-VT) Freedom to Read Amendment to the Commerce, Justice, State (CJS) Appropriations Bill by a vote of 238-187. >> More
June 3, 2005:
PEN Calls for the Permanent Release from Prison of Journalist Akbar Ganji

Now that Ganji has been released from Evin Prison, we urge that his freedom from incarceration be made permanent and that he not be returned to prison next week. >> More
May 16, 2005:
International PEN statement on the recent events in Uzbekistan

International PEN is alarmed by recent days' events in Uzbekistan and calls for a lifting of the clamp down on the media reporting from cities affected by unrest, and urges that there be no further killings. >> More
May 15, 2005:
Writers Condemn Conviction of Poet, Two Other Reform Advocates In Saudi Arabia

PEN reacted with shock to the announcement that Saudi poet Ali Al-Domaini has been sentenced to nine years in prison for criticizing the pace of political reforms in Saudi Arabia. >> More
May 6, 2005:
Verdict Imminent In Trial Testing Saudi Tolerance For Reform

PEN joined Saudi and international human rights groups in calling for the unconditional release of the reformers, calling the proceedings a key test of whether Saudi citizens will have a voice in shaping their country's political future. >> More
May 3, 2005:
World Press Freedom Day

To mark this year's May 3rd World Press Freedom Day, PEN is focusing on three cases of attacks on writers and journalists who use the Internet. >> More
April 28, 2005:
PEN Centers join campaign to end murder of Mexican journalists

PEN Canada, PEN Québec, PEN American Center, and Danish PEN have joined forces with PEN Mexico and other Mexican media and free expression organizations, converging under the banner of Ni Uno Más (Not One More). >> More
April 4, 2005:
Turkish Publisher to Receive Jeri Laber International Freedom to Publish Award

Abdullah Keskin, the courageous publisher of Avesta, has been selected as the 2005 recipient of the Jeri Laber International Freedom to Publish Award. >> More
April 4, 2005:
Librarian Who Fought FBI Search to Receive 2005 PEN/Newman’s Own Award

PEN named Joan Airoldi, a librarian and library director in rural Washington State who challenged an FBI effort to search patron records, as the recipient of this year’s prestigious PEN/Newman’s Own First Amendment Award. >> More
April 4, 2005:
Jailed Saudi author, murdered Gambian publisher to receive 2005 PEN Award

PEN named Ali Al-Domaini, one of three prominent intellectuals currently imprisoned for criticizing the pace and reach of human rights reforms in Saudi Arabia, and Deyda Hydara, a newspaper publisher and press freedom champion, as recipients of its 2005 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards. >> More
March 9, 2005:
Freedom to Read Protection Act Reintroduced in Washington

PEN cheered the reintroduction of the Freedom to Read Protection Act, promising to mobilize readers and book lovers all over the country to press for the restoration by the end of 2005 of privacy safeguards stripped by the USA PATRIOT Act. >> More
March 8, 2005:
International Women's Day

This year PEN is focusing on three women under attack for using the Internet to disseminate information and ideas. >> More
January 5, 2005:
Freedom to Write Award recipient Aung Myint released in Myanmar

PEN welcomed reports that poet and journalist Aung Myint and three other journalists were among more than 50 political prisoners released in Myanmar on January 3. >> More
January 4, 2005:
PEN urges Senate to examine Gonzales's record on torture policies

PEN asked members of the Senate Judiciary Committee today to use this Thursday's hearings on the nomination of Alberto Gonzales as an opportunity to reassert United States commitment to an international ban on torture. >> More
2004

December 15, 2004:
Treasury Department Changes Regulations

OFAC issued new regulations today which explicitly permit Americans to engage in "all transactions necessary and ordinarily incident to the publishing and marketing of manuscripts, books, journals, and newspapers in paper or electronic format." >> More
December 14, 2004:
PEN Condemns Detention of Chinese Writers

PEN expressed alarm that Chinese authorities detained three prominent intellectuals yesterday, including two writers who helped found a new PEN Center to promote the free exchange of literature and ideas in China. >> More
December 10, 2004:
PEN Welcomes Release of Two Cuban Journalists

PEN welcomes the release of journalists Edel José García Díaz and Jorge Olivera Castillo on health grounds. However, PEN remains concerned that they have only been freed on parole and that they could both still be returned to prison. >> More
December 9, 2004:
PEN/Newman's Own Award recipient Barbara Parsons Lane given parole

The state has granted parole to a woman who won a $25,000 writing award with the help of best-selling author Wally Lamb. >> More
December 2, 2004:
Raúl Rivero Castañeda and Oscar Espinosa Chepe released on health grounds

PEN welcomes the release of Raúl Rivero Castañeda and Oscar Espinosa Chepe, reportedly on health grounds. However, PEN remains concerned that they have only been released on parole and that they could both still be returned to prison. >> More
October 26, 2004:
Nobel Peace Prize winner joins battle for free speech

Shirin Ebadi, the Iranian human rights activist who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 2003, has filed suit against the U.S. Treasury Department. >> More
Oct. 22, 2004:
Uzbek journalist, human rights activist Ruslan Sharipov obtains asylum in the U.S.

PEN is delighted to announce that Uzbek journalist and human rights activist Ruslan Sharipov has obtained political asylum in the United States and is now with members of his family in California. >> More
October 8, 2004:
PEN protests the recent denial of entry visas to Cuban scholars

We register our profound concern over the recent denial of entry visas to 61 Cuban scholars who were scheduled to participate in this week's congress of the Latin American Studies Association in Las Vegas. >> More
September 29, 2004:
PEN presents signatures to Congress in support of amending Patriot Act

Organizations representing booksellers, librarians, publishers and authors went to Capitol Hill today to seek an amendment to Section 215 of the Patriot Act to restore due process and confidentiality to bookstore and library records. >> More
September 27, 2004:
PEN, publishers file suit to overturn information restrictions

PEN joined publishing groups in filing suit in a challenge to regulations governing the publication of informational materials from countries subject to U.S. trade embargo. >> More
July 20, 2004:
PEN and CPJ protest U.S. decision to revoke Cuban journalist's visa

We express our shock and extreme concern that the U.S. State Department recently revoked Cuban independent journalist Bernardo Arévalo Padrón's refugee visa, just over one month before he was scheduled to travel to the United States. >> More
July 19, 2004:
International PEN Writers in Prison Committee Cuba Campaign

Thirty-two writers, journalists, and librarians were sentenced during one-day trials held in early April 2003 under laws governing the protection of the Cuban state. >> More
July 8, 2004:
PEN to intensify Reader Privacy efforts after controversial House vote

PEN vowed to continue the drive to restore reader privacy protections after an effort to halt the funding that allows the government to conduct searches of bookstore and library records under Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act fell just one vote short of passing in the House today. >> More
June 18, 2004:
PEN welcomes release of Vietnamese Internet dissident Lê Chi Quang

PEN hailed the releaseof Lê Chi Quang, an Internet activist whose critical essays about the Vietnamese government earned him a four-year prison term followed by three years of house arrest. >> More
May 21, 2004:
Fifth biennial conference of Writers in Prison Committee

Delegates attending the conference recognised that these are dark days for the right to freedom of expression, but reaffirmed their belief that the role of the writer is more important than ever. >> More
May 3, 2004:
PEN calls on President to abandon Patriot Act politics

PEN is calling on President Bush to lead an open, bipartisan evaluation of individual provisions of the Act that are scheduled to sunset in 2005. >> More
April 14, 2004:
Vaclav Havel and Nobel laureates call For release of imprisoned Burmese writers

Nobel laureates are joining Vaclav Havel to urge Senior General Than Shwe of the Burmese Military Junta to immediately release Nobel Peace Laureate Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and other Burmese writers. >> More
April 14, 2004:
PEN welcomes developments in prison writing suit, workshop suspension

Yesterday's meeting resulted in assurances from the Commissioner that the program would be allowed to resume, that reports that some computer files had been erased would be investigated, and that Lamb and Griffith would continue to lead the program. >> More
April 13, 2004:
Letter demands release of Daw Aung San Suu Kyi and other writers

We are profoundly disturbed by the open, unchecked, and accelerating suppression of the internationally acclaimed peaceful movement for democracy in the Union of Myanmar. >> More
April 5, 2004:
First Amendment problems remain in wake of latest OFAC pronouncement

A letter sent by the director of OFAC to the IEEE leaves many questions unanswered with respect to Treasury Department regulations governing the publication of informational materials from countries subject to U.S. trade embargo. >> More
April 5, 2004:
PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award recipient announced

PEN has named Barbara Parsons Lane, one of eight incarcerated writers who were sued by the State of Connecticut after contributing to Couldn't Keep It To Myself: Testimonies from our Imprisoned Sisters, as the recipient of this year's PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award. >> More
April 5, 2004:
PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Award Recipients Announced

Nasser Zarafshan, a writer serving a five-year prison term in Iran, and Le Chi Quang, whose essays about the Vietnamese government earned him a four-year prison term, have reeceived the 2004 Awards. >> More
March 4, 2004:
PEN protests Treasury Department regulations that interfere with publishing

PEN requests an immediate review of OFAC regulations that could be interpreted to bar or restrict in any way the publication of literature-and indeed any information and informational materials-originating in countries subject to U.S. trade embargo. >> More
February 17, 2004:
Book, library groups launch Patriot Act petition campaign

PEN joined booksellers and librarians and writers to launch a nationwide effort to obtain one million signatures in support of legislation to amend Section 215 of the USA PATRIOT Act. >> More
2003

December 4, 2003:
International PEN´s Mexico City Congress condemns attacks on writers worldwide

Attacks on writers and journalists around the world was central to the discussions at PEN´s 69th International Congress, held in Mexico City in November. >> More
November 19, 2003:
PEN hails releases of Tunisian e-zine writer and Cuban journalist

PEN hailed the release of Zouhair Yahyaoui, an Internet activist whose popular electronic magazine earned him a two-year prison term in Tunisia. >> More
September 30, 2003:
Bryant Park event reflects on the freedoms to write and read

PEN sponsored this reading to reflect on the freedoms to write and read seventy years after the Nazi book burnings. >> More
September 25, 2003:
PEN sounds alarm over court appearance of Uzbek activist

PEN is expressing serious alarm over reports that Uzbek journalist and human rights activist Ruslan Sharipov appeared at an appeal hearing today with suspicious facial injuries. >> More
September 19, 2003:
PEN protests Ashcroft comments on librarians, urges repeal of Patriot Act

PEN protests in the strongest possible terms the recent speech deriding the concerns that librarians, booksellers, and other organizations have expressed over Section 215 of the USA Patriot Act. >> More
May 22, 2003:
Letters protest disciplining teacher for assigning Russell Banks book

We are interested primarily in seeing a resolution to this situation that respects First Amendment and academic freedom interests of students and teachers, and high quality education at Brooklyn Tech. >> More
May 15, 2003:
Congress must safeguard Americans' freedom to read, book community says

PEN joined colleagues from the publishing, bookselling and library communities in calling upon Congress to safeguard the right of every American to read freely, without the government's knowledge or intervention. >> More
April 9, 2003:
PEN to present impunity cases at UNESCO Press Freedom Day observance

International PEN's Writers in Prison Committee will press the case of an Iranian writer and lawyer jailed for his crusade to win justice for the families of murdered writers in Iran. >> More
April 2, 2003:
Texas librarian to receive PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award

PEN named Jerilynn Adams Williams, a Texas librarian who successfully turned back an attempt to remove books from circulation at Montgomery County public libraries, as the recipient of this year's PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award. >> More
April 2, 2003:
Cuban Journalist, Tunisian Writer to Receive PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Awards

PEN named Bernardo Arévalo Padrón, an independent journalist serving a six-year prison term, and Zouhair Yahyaoui, a Tunisian Internet activist whose electronic magazine earned him a two-year prison term, as recipients of the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards. >> More
January 23, 2003:
Grigory Pasko Released

Grigory Pasko, a journalist imprisoned in December 2001, was freed today, following a parole hearing. >> More
2002

Dec. 10, 2002:
PEN announces year-long freedom of expression and impunity campaign

The campaign includes direct actions throughout the year and will culminate with the release of a PEN report on the problem of impunity and a series of public programs during International PEN's 69th World Congress. >> More
October 22, 2002:
PEN protests U.S. treatment of Turkish rights champion

PEN demands that the State Department re-issue a visa to Haluk Gerger, a prominent Turkish writer and human rights activist who was denied entry by immigration officials at Newark International Airport. >> More
August 19, 2002:
Book groups protest secrecy on bookstore, library subpoenas

Groups representing authors, book publishers, and booksellers have criticized the Justice Department for refusing to reveal how many times it has used its power under the Patriot Act to force bookstores, libraries and newspapers to reveal confidential records. >> More
June 25, 2002:
Risking retribution, Iranian lawyer pleads for jailed husband's release

PEN issued an urgent appeal for the release of four prominent writers and translators imprisoned in Iran. >> More
April 11, 2002:
Vanessa Leggett to receive 2002 PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award

PEN named Vanessa Leggett, the freelance writer who was jailed in a federal detention center in Texas for 168 days for refusing to bow to a sweeping subpoena of confidential source materials, as the recipient of this year's PEN/Newman's Own First Amendment Award. >> More
April 11, 2002:
Burmese poet, Uighur historian to receive PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Award

PEN named Aung Myint, a Burmese poet, and Tohti Tunyaz, an ethnic Uighur historian and writer, as recipients of its 2002 PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards. >> More
March 7, 2002:
PEN fights Bush executive order on presidential papers

PEN has joined the legal battle to reverse President Bush's executive order limiting access to presidential papers and to authorize the National Archives to administer the Presidential Records Act of 1978 as Congress intended. >> More
February 7, 2002:
PEN applauds release of Mexican general

Writers throughout North America hailed the release of a Mexican general jailed for more than eight years for essays advocating human rights reforms for the armed forces in Mexico. >> More
January 3, 2002:
PEN American Center deplores sentencing of Russian military journalist

PEN expressed deep disappointment over the news that Grigory Pasko, the Russian military journalist who has been on trial for reporting on the dumping of nuclear waste by the Russian Navy, has been sentenced to serve an additional two years and four months in prison. >> More
2001

November 16, 2001:
PEN seeks quick action by Fox administration following IACHR ultimatum

PEN called on President Vicente Fox to comply with the two-day deadline the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) has issued for the release of José Francisco Gallardo Rodríguez. >> More
October 11, 2001:
PEN American Center protests prison transfer for Iranian translator

PEN expressed deep concern over the news that Khalil Rostamkhani, an Iranian translator sentenced to 8 years in prison, has been transferred to Bandar Abbas prison in southern Iran. >> More
May 14, 2001:
PEN opposes preliminiary injunction halting publication of The Wind Done Gone

PEN called on a Federal Appeals Court to reverse a lower court decision enjoining publication of Alice Randall’s The Wind Done Gone. >> More
April 5, 2001:
Iranian publisher, Uzbek novelist to receive 2001 Freedom to Write Awards

PEN named Shahla Lahiji, a publisher prosecuted for participating in a conference in Berlin last year, and Mamadali Mahmudov, a renowned novelist and opposition activist serving a 14-year prison term in Uzbekistan, as recipients of the PEN/Barbara Goldsmith Freedom to Write Awards. >> More
March 26, 2001:
High school librarian, theater director receive PEN/Newman's Own Awards

PEN named Deloris Wilson and Alberto Sarraín as co-recipients of this year’s PEN/Newman’s Own First Amendment Award. >> More
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