Rushdie,75,spent years in hiding after Iran’s Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini issued a 1989 edict,a fatwa,calling for his death after publication of his novelThe Satanic Verses,which some Muslims consider blasphemous. Over the past two decades,Rushdie has travelled freely.
Hadi Matar,24,of Fairview,New Jersey,has been incarcerated after pleading not guilty to attempted murder and assault in the August 12 attack on Rushdie as he was being introduced at the Chautauqua Institution,a rurally located centre 89 kilometres south-west of Buffalo that is known for its summertime lecture series.
After the attack,Rushdie was treated at a Pennsylvania hospital,where he was briefly put on a ventilator to recover from what Wylie toldEl Pais was a “brutal attack” that cut nerves to one arm.
Wylie told the newspaper he could not say whether Rushdie remained in a hospital or discuss his whereabouts.
“He’s going to live ... That’s the important thing,” Wylie said.
The attack was along the lines of what Rushdie and his agent have thought was the “principal danger ... a random person coming out of nowhere and attacking,” Wylie toldEl Pais.