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Police info about threat not true: Rushdie

NEW YORK: An "angry" Salman Rushdie claims he has found out that the intelligence provided to him by the Rajasthan police about threat to his life if he attended the Jaipur Literature Festival was concocted to prevent him from going to India.

Rushdie took to microblogging site Twitter to vent his anger and responded to reports in Indian media that said "Rajasthan police invented plot to keep away Rushdie." Rushdie tweeted, "Rajasthan police invented plot to keep away Rushdie. I've investigated, & believe that I was indeed lied to. I am outraged and very angry." Responding to a comment to his tweet, Rushdie said he did not know if the false intelligence information was given by the Rajasthan police under instructions from someone.

"Don't know who gave orders. And yes, I guess the same police who want to arrest (authors) Hari, Amitava, Jeet and Ruchir.” “Disgusting”, he said, responding to a comment on whether it is the same police who now want to arrest writers for reading passages of his banned work 'The Satanic Verses' at the festival.

Rushdie also posted a link to a news report that said local intelligence officials in Rajasthan had "invented" information about the assassination plot against him to keep him from attending the literary event. His accompanying tweet read, "Here's the story. Astonishing." The author had dropped plans to attend the literature festival saying he was informed by intelligence sources in Maharasthra and Rajasthan that paid hitmen from the Mumbai underworld would "eliminate" him if he came to India.

Rushdie had expressed doubts about the "accuracy" of the intelligence but said in a statement that it would be "irresponsible" on his part to still attend the festival and put the lives of other authors and participants in danger.

In protest, authors Amitava Kumar, Hari Kunzru, Ruchir Joshi and Jeet Thayil had read passages of 'The Satanic Verses', a controversial 1988 novel by Rushdie that is banned in India. The police is now demanding to see tapes of the recordings of the authors reading from the banned book. — PTI

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Rajasthan CM refutes Rushdie's accusation

JAIPUR: Rajasthan Chief Minister Ashok Gehlot on Sunday refuted Salman Rushdie's accusation that police concocted a supposed death threat to keep him away from the Jaipur Literature Festival.

"It is not true. The government had made all arrangements for his security because it was our duty. If we get an advisory from the Centre about a threat to the life of a certain person, then we have to make the arrangements for his security," Gehlot told reporters here.

Gehlot said Rushdie was a person of Indian origin and does not require a visa to come to India.

"But if there is some threat to his life due to anger among a group of people and if feel that could affect law and order, then we have to see as it is a popular festival," he said.

Rushdie on Sunday tweeted: "I've investigated, and believe I was indeed lied to. I am outraged and very angry."

The Rajasthan police refused to comment on Rushdie's charge that they concocted the story about assassins from the Mumbai underworld had been hired to kill him in Jaipur.

The sources said they had intelligence inputs about the threat to the author.

"The Satanic Verses" is banned in India and some Muslim organisations have opposed Rushdie's visit to the festival. — IANSBack

 

 

Complaint against authors for reading from 'Satanic Verses'

JAIPUR: A complaint has been filed here against four authors who read from Salman Rushdie's banned book 'Satanic Verses' at the ongoing Jaipur Literature Festival.

"We received the complaint yesterday and are examining it. It is a complaint and no FIR has been lodged so far," A. Mohammad, SHO of Ashok Nagar police station, today said.

The complainant Ashok Kumar has demanded action against Hari Kunzru, Amitava Kumar, Jeet Thayil and Rushir Joshi for reading from the book on January 20 to protest against the India-born author's cancellation of his visit citing death threats.

Meanwhile, sources said that the four authors had left the festival. It was unclear whether they were in the city or not.

The organisers had yesterday slammed them by saying that they did not give consent for such actions. — PTI

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Indian pride, Sachin quest add spice to final Test

MELBOURNE: India have five days at the Adelaide Oval to show some fighting spirit, restore a modicum of pride and avoid a whitewash in the fourth and final Test against Australia this week. 

The tourists arrived Down Under ranked second in the world Test rankings with confidence high that their record of having never won a series on Australian soil might finally be banished. 

Three humbling routs later and, starting on Tuesday, a squad containing some of the finest batsmen the game has seen will be reduced to scrapping for a face-saving victory against the fourth-ranked Australians.

They will have to do it without captain Mahendra Singh Dhoni who was banned for the Test because of his team's slow over rate in the third Test in Perth, which the hosts won by an innings and 37 runs in two and a half days.

"Whatever backlash is happening in India, we have to accept it," opener Gautam Gambhir said this week.

"There was a lot of expectations from us that we should have done well with the kind of batting we have. We have let the entire nation down."

Sachin Tendulkar's continuing quest for his century of international centuries at least offers Indian fans the prospect of something to celebrate in the series.

The Adelaide Oval, one of Test cricket's most picturesque venues, would be a suitable setting for the milestone and is also likely to offer a suitably batting-friendly track.

"I'll be looking at a traditional Adelaide Oval pitch," head groundsman Damian Hough said this week. 

"A little bit in it on day one for the quicks, then settling down on days two and three, and then offering a bit for the spinners on days four and five."

GREAT CHALLENGE: Australia are almost certain to drop one of the quartet of quicks who bowled them to victory in Perth to allow the recall of spinner Nathan Lyon. Mitchell Starc, by his own admission, is most likely to carry the drinks leaving Ben Hilfenhaus, Peter Siddle and Ryan Harris to once again get stuck in to the Indian batsmen.

Lyon is looking forward to bowling against Tendulkar at a venue where a year ago he was cutting the grass as a member of the ground staff as Australia crashed to innings defeat in the Ashes series against England.

"India's a great side to play against. Even though we're up three-nil, we're expecting India to come out and hit us hard," he told reporters in Adelaide this week.

"They have just been a great challenge for myself, being a young spinner and bowling against the best batters against spin. 

"Their hands are unbelievable and they're really confident against spin."

Lyon is possibly alone in his appreciation of the Indian batting in this series as the much vaunted line-up has failed to hit a single century between them.

Gambhir's opening partner Virender Sehwag will captain the side in Dhoni's absence, while Wriddhiman Saha is almost certain to play his second test match as replacement wicketkeeper. 

"Pressure is there but it's a positive," Saha said. "There is no negative in it. There is only good positive pressure." — Reuters

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