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Professional/Scholarly
Publishing Division of the
Association of American
Publishers

The Association of American
University Presses

The PEN American Center
Arcade Publishing
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
Contacts
Anna Kushner (PEN); 212-334-1660 x106
anna@pen.org
Brenna McLaughlin (AAUP); 212 -989-1010 x24
bmclaughlin@aaupnet.org
Marc Brodsky (AAP/PSP); 301-209-3100
Brodsky@aip.org
Nobel Peace Prize Winner Joins Battle
Against Treasury Department for Free Speech
Iranian Human Rights Lawyers Memoir
May Not Be Published in the United States
New York, NY (October 27, 2004) 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 in federal court in New
York because regulations of the Treasury Departments Office of Foreign
Assets Control (OFAC) prohibit the publication of a book she wants to
write about her life and her work for readers in the United States. Ms.
Ebadi and The Strothman Agency, LLC, a literary agency that wants to work
with her, filed the suit which will be joined to a legal challenge mounted
by publishers and authors last month.
Ms. Ebadis predicament provides a perfect illustration of the harm
the OFAC regulations cause. Ms. Ebadi has been imprisoned for her human
rights work in Iran. She could not publish the book she wants to write
in Iran, but the OFAC regulations also prevent anyone from publishing
it in the United States. As long as the regulations stand, the book will
not come into being.
The regulations were first challenged in a lawsuit filed on September
27, 2004, by the Association of American Publishers Professional and Scholarly
Publishing division (AAP/PSP), the Association of American University
Presses (AAUP), PEN American Center (PEN), and Arcade Publishing.
The publishing and authors groups point to Ms. Ebadi as exactly
the kind of author whose work should be published in the United States.
"Do we really want to deprive an Iranian human rights activist of
the opportunity to communicate with the American public?" asked Marc
H. Brodsky, Chairman of AAP/PSP and Executive Director of the American
Institute of Physics. "These regulations are counter-productive and
should simply be scrapped." Brodsky also responded to recent statements
OFAC has made in defense of the regulations, in response to the September
27 suit: "According to OFAC, publishers who have concerns should
just come to them for a license, but publishers should not have to ask
their government for permission to use their constitutional right of free
speech."
The regulations stem from U.S. trade sanctions imposed on particular
countries. Congress has declared that trade embargoes may not be applied
to "information and informational materials," but OFAC has defied
that prohibition and maintained regulations that prohibit the publication
of many books and articles by authors in Iran, Cuba and Sudan. The regulations
are being challenged as violations of the specific instructions of Congress
as well as the First Amendment.
The OFAC regulations specifically forbid the publication of works by
authors in Iran, Cuba and Sudan unless the works in question have already
been completed before any American is involved. Americans may not co-author
books or articles with authors in the embargoed countries and may not
enter into "transactions" involving any works that are not yet
fully completedeven though authors, publishers an agents generally
must work with one another well before a new work is fully createdand
Americans may not provide "substantive or artistic alterations or
enhancements" or promote or market either new or previously existing
works from the affected countries, unless they obtain a specific license
from OFAC. Violators are subject to prison sentences of up to 10 years
or fines of up to $1,000,000 per violation.
Both Ms. Ebadi and the groups that initiated the challenge agree that
Ms. Ebadi is only the most prominent example of a valuable voice that
has been silenced. "There are untold numbers of less prominent authors
whose stories have no chance of reaching us. The embargoes are cutting
Americans off from scholars, dissidents, scientists and others in regions
that are of enormous public concern," said Peter Givler, Executive
Director of AAUP. He cited books on history, music and archaeology that
university presses have been unable to publish, and even an article that
had to be withdrawn from the scholarly journal Mathematical Geology. "Ms.
Ebadis inability to publish her memoirs provides another example
of the chilling effect the regulations are having on publishing in America."
In her court filing, Ms. Ebadi decries the "enforced silence"
the OFAC regulations impose, calling it "a critical missed opportunity
both for Americans to learn more about my country and its people from
a variety of Iranian voices and for a better understanding to be achieved
between our two countries."
"At a time when building mutual understanding between peoples and
nations seems to us more urgent that ever, these regulations only serve
to reinforce distances and divisions," said Larry Siems, Director
of the Freedom to Write and International Programs at PEN American Center.
PEN and Arcade are planning to publish an anthology of works by Iranian
writers, poets, and critics since the Iranian Revolution that expose the
turmoil and repression of recent years. "Some of the work cant
be published in Iran because of government censorship there," said
Dick Seaver of Arcade Publishing. "If publication is blocked by government
interference here, whats the functional difference between Irans
censorship and ours?"
The groups challenging the OFAC regulations point out that the regulations
violate the Trading with the Enemy Act (TWEA), the International Emergency
Economic Powers Act (IEEPA) and the First Amendment. TWEA and IEEPA were
twice amended by Congress, in the Berman Amendment and the Free Trade
In Ideas Amendment, to make it clear that transactions involving "information
and informational materials" are exempt from trade embargoes. The
AAP/PSP, AAUP, PEN, and Arcade contend that OFACs regulations directly
contradict the statutes that authorize trade sanctions and infringe the
First Amendment rights of publishers, authors and the public. "Accordingly
to Congress and the Constitution, Americans are entitled to receive ideas
and information from authors anywhere in the world," said the organizations
lead counsel, Edward Davis. Ms. Ebadis suit makes the same contentions
on behalf of authors and the literary agents who help them prepare and
market their works.
Since the effect of these OFAC regulations became clear late in 2003,
as a result of several rulings issued by OFAC, publishers, authors, and
public interest groups have pursued a number of paths to making OFAC enforcement
consistent with the protection for "information and informational
materials" mandated by Congress in the Berman Amendment and the Free
Trade In Ideas Amendment. "We decided to pursue the legal challenge
because our efforts have not yet yielded a resolution that is satisfactory
on either the law or the principle," explained Mr. Brodsky. The plaintiffs
hope for a decision early next year.
Edward Davis and Linda Steinman of the New York office of Davis Wright
Tremaine are lead counsel for the AAP/PSP, AAUP, PEN and Arcade. Marjorie
Heins of the Brennan Center for Justice at NYU and law professor Leon
Friedman are co-counsel for PEN and Arcade. Ms. Ebadi and the Strothman
Agency are represented in their suit by Philip A. Lacovara, Anthony J.
Diana and Ryan P. Farley of Mayer, Brown, Rowe & Maw.
For links to the relevant OFAC rulings, the legal papers of AAP/PSP, AAUP,
PEN and Arcade, and additional materials, visit http://aaupnet.org/ofac.
About the AAP/PSP
Members of the Professional/Scholarly Publishing (PSP) Division of the
Association of American Publishers, Inc. (AAP) publish the vast majority
of materials used in the U.S. by scholars and professionals in science,
medicine, technology, business, law, reference, social science and the
humanities. The Division's (www.pspcentral.org)
182 professional societies, commercial publishers and university presses
produce books, journals, computer software, databases and electronic products.
About the AAUP
The AAUP (www.aaupnet.org)
counts among its members 111 nonprofit scholarly publishers affiliated
with research universities, scholarly societies, research institutions
and museums located in 43 states. Collectively they publish around 10,000
books each year and over 700 journals in virtually every field of human
knowledge.
About PEN American Center
PEN American Center is an organization of over 2,500 prominent novelists,
poets, essayists, translators, playwrights, and editors. As part of International
PEN, it and its affiliated organizations have defended free and open communication
within and among nations for more than 80 years. The 2,500 PEN American
Center (www.pen.org)
members are a major voice of the national and international literary community.
About Arcade
Arcade Publishing, Inc. (www.arcadepub.com)
is an independent book publisher based in New York City. Founded in 1988,
it publishes fiction and nonfiction by authors from around the world,
including works by some of the most prominent authors of our time. Arcade
is the publisher of the upcoming PEN Anthology of Contemporary Iranian
Literature.
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