Friday 14 November 2014

Enoh Meyomesse


Enoh Meyomesse is a Cameroonian writer currently being held in Kondengui Central Prison in the country’s capital, Yaoundé. He has been imprisoned in various locations since the 22nd of November 2011, on charges such as being involved with an attempted coup, possessing a firearm, and theft. No evidence or witnesses for these crimes were presented at his trial, and he was not allowed to present a defence. His lawyers were able to appeal his case, but the trial date has been repeatedly postponed and now, 15 months on from the original appeal, the date is set for the 20th of November 2014. However, given past proceedings, it is debatable whether or not this trial will take place.

 In his first 30 days of imprisonment he was subjected to torture; he was kept in complete darkness for the full 30 days and as a result of this has long-term sight damage which could lead to permanent blindness. He is also suffering from gastrointestinal disease which is not consistently treated in the dire conditions under which he is held.

Enoh Meyomesse has continued to write while in prison, and has published a collection of poems, adding to his 15 publications prior to his imprisonment.

Meyomesse himself wrote, “[English PEN] have proven to me that, while my biological family has abandoned me, there exists another family – perhaps even more important – a literary family, a family of novelists and poets like me, which is always beside me and will never abandon me.”, and that is why on the 17th of November, Liverpool Student PEN centre will join with other PEN centres around the globe and write messages of solidarity and support to Enoh Meyomesse.

Learn more
Alain Mabanckou writes to Enoh Meyomesse
Enoh Meyomesse's Website
Enoh Meyomesse writes from jail
 
 

Wednesday 12 November 2014

Day of the Imprisoned Writer

Everyone recognises the feeling of excitement when you receive a letter in the post. When it lands in the hallway and the handwritten address on the front of the envelope tells you it’s not junk mail or a bank statement. When you know that it contains words of friendship or good news.
Imagine, now, you are not sitting comfortably on your sofa when you hear that unmistakable clang of the post box and the soft shuffle of letters on the floor. Instead, you are enshrouded in darkness, kept in conditions we all know humans are subjected to but choose to conveniently store at the backs of our collective mind. You are unfairly imprisoned for exaggerated or imaginary crimes, held without fair trial, shut off from the world because of your views and writing. Imagine the moment hope a letter of support could bring.
International PEN has, for the past 32 years, held an annual Day of the Imprisoned Writer. This day highlights the plight of writers around the world who are imprisoned, or at risk of being imprisoned, for holding and writing about beliefs that challenge the status quo. On this day, which in 2014 falls on the Saturday the 15h of November, supporters of the freedom to read and write bring these issues to the forefront of their communities through readings, letters of support and fundraising activities.
Liverpool Student PEN will be marking the Day of the Imprisoned Writer on Monday the 17th, (as the official date of the 15th is on a Saturday and we want to make the biggest impact on the University of Liverpool campus), and we will be writing letters of support to the following five writers.
 Nelson Aquilera
Azimjon Askarov
Dieudonné Enoh Meyomesse
Mahvash Sabet
Gao Yu