Rushdie earned a fatwa from Iran's Islamic regime in 1989 sentencing him to death for his novel “The Satanic Verses”, which forced the British writer to live in hiding under police protection for years. — File Photo

JAIPUR: British author Salman Rushdie is to address an Indian literature festival by video link after he was forced to pull-out in person because of protests by Islamic hardliners, organisers said on Monday.

Rushdie's appearance at the Jaipur Literature Festival was cancelled on Friday, with the Indian-origin writer citing alleged threats to his life from underworld gunmen who had been hired to kill him.

Earlier this month, an influential Islamic seminary in northern India triggered the controversy by calling for him to be denied entrance to the country because of his allegedly blasphemous 1988 novel “Satanic Verses”.

“Salman Rushdie will address the Jaipur Literature Festival through video conference,” Sanjoy Roy, producer of the festival, told AFP, adding that he would talk on Tuesday at 3:45 pm (10:15 GMT).

Since cancelling his scheduled appearances, Rushdie has accused the police of fabricating the death threat plot to keep him away from the festival, India's biggest literature event.

In an editorial on Monday, The Hindu newspaper said the author, who was born in Mumbai, was “entitled to a full apology for this shameful episode and to an unconditional assurance that he is welcome in India at any time and place”.

The newspaper said that the three men alleged to have been involved in the assassination plot were not a threat and said the episode had “brought about the humiliation of the country”.

Rushdie's 1988 novel “The Satanic Verses”, which is banned in India, is seen by many Muslims worldwide as a blasphemous work that insults their religion.

Four authors who read excerpts from the book at the Jaipur event to protest the treatment of Rushdie have since left on the advice of the organisers, who faced a police investigation.

Rushdie, who appeared at the Jaipur festival without incident in 2007, spent a decade in hiding after Iranian spiritual leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a fatwa in 1989 calling for his death over the novel.

Opinion

Editorial

Punitive tax plan
Updated 01 Oct, 2024

Punitive tax plan

FBR strategy appears to rely solely on enforcement through punitive actions without actually reforming the complicated tax regime.
US sabre-rattling
Updated 01 Oct, 2024

US sabre-rattling

If America is serious about preventing a wider regional war, it should reconsider its military deployment plans.
Balochistan bleeds
01 Oct, 2024

Balochistan bleeds

BALOCHISTAN continues to sink into an abyss of violence and despair, with the province once again experiencing a...
Legal games
Updated 30 Sep, 2024

Legal games

The ECP should stop playing games and take a clear position. It should not expect sympathy from the courts at this point.
Trust needed
30 Sep, 2024

Trust needed

THE situation in Swat remains tense. The locals have, for quite some time now, been raising the alarm over the...
Dengue danger
30 Sep, 2024

Dengue danger

THE slightest change in temperature is a harbinger of a disease to come. Hence, in the post-monsoon season, when the...