PEN marks World Poetry Day 2014

On World Poetry Day, PEN highlights the challenges and dangers facing poets and writers around the world. 

21 March marks World Poetry Day, first declared by UNESCO in 1999, to ‘support linguistic diversity through poetic expression and to offer endangered languages the opportunity to be heard within their communities’.

PEN International and PEN Centres around the world have long campaigned on behalf of poets at risk and for the protection and promotion of minority languages. In 2011 PEN’s Translation and Linguistic Rights Committee developed the Girona Manifesto on Linguistic Rights - a ten point document designed to be translated and disseminated widely as a tool to defend linguistic diversity around the world.

PEN International’s Writers in Prison Committee works on behalf of persecuted poets, writers and journalists worldwide, monitoring between over 1000 cases across the globe each year. The WiPC mobilises the wider PEN community to take action through its Rapid Action Network alerts, targeted regional campaigns, and by utilising PEN’s consultative status with the UN to engage in advocacy at an international level.

To mark World Poetry Day, PEN is focusing on a number of cases which are emblematic of the threats faced by poets around the world and highlighting their continued contribution to freedom of expression.

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Ethiopia: Take action for imprisoned journalists Reeyot Alemu and Eskinder Nega