Arundhati Roy rejects Indian literary award
The novelist sent the institution a one-page fax saying she did not want to accept a prize from a body linked to the government, an academy official told PTI.
"We are trying to pursuade her to reconsider her decision. We are telling her that the (Sahitya) Akademi is intellectually and culturally purely autonomous although it is funded by the government," said K. Sachidanandan.
"There have been many occasions when we opposed government policies ourselves," said the academy official.
Roy, who won the 1997 Booker prize for her first novel "The God of Small Things", is known in India as a strong critic of the government and in particular for her opposition to 1998 nuclear tests and big dam projects.
Comments