-
Bowlers, selectors under fire after Australia's T20 World Cup exit
-
Racism allegations overshadow Real Madrid victory as PSG win in Champions League
-
Japan's Nakai shines on ice as Frostad soars to Olympic big air gold
-
Japanese teen Nakai leads Sakamoto after Olympic women's short programme
-
Sweden to face USA in Olympic men's ice hockey quarter-finals
-
Alexander-Arnold hits out at 'disgusting' alleged Vinicius racism
-
Bird flu ravaging Antarctic wildlife, scientist warns
-
Nakai leads Sakamoto in Olympics after women's short programme
-
Guirassy guides Dortmund past Atalanta in Champions League play-offs
-
Vinicius stunner helps Real Madrid edge Benfica in play-off marred by alleged racism
-
Doue inspires PSG to comeback Champions League win in Monaco
-
'Climate cult' hurts Europe's economy, US energy secretary tells AFP
-
Peru's presidential musical chairs
-
France arrests nine over far-right activist's killing
-
France arrests seven over far-right activist's killing
-
Frostad dethrones Ruud in Olympic freeski big air thriller
-
Galatasaray thrash 10-man Juve in Champions League play-off 1st leg
-
Woods return timeline uncertain, but won't rule out Masters
-
Dozens of film figures condemn Berlin Film Festival 'silence' on Gaza
-
Iran, Ukraine talks spark diplomatic merry-go-round in Geneva
-
Canada launches huge defence plan to curb reliance on US
-
US says will match alleged Chinese low-yield nuclear tests
-
Alcaraz battles into second round of Qatar Open
-
Russians, Belarusians to compete under own flags at Paralympics: IPC tells AFP
-
Bayer proposes class settlement for weedkiller cancer claims
-
Gauff, Rybakina cruise into Dubai last 16
-
Greenland entrepreneur gambles on leafy greens
-
Father of US school shooter goes on trial on murder charges
-
Iran, US agree on 'guiding principles' for deal at Geneva talks: Iran FM
-
Warner Bros. gives Paramount one week to outbid Netflix
-
Russians, Belarusians allowed to compete under own flags at 2026 Paralympics: IPC tells AFP
-
Ukrainian wife battles blackouts to keep terminally ill husband alive
-
Pollock handed first England start for Ireland visit
-
Oil prices fall back as 'hopeful' Tehran responds to Trump
-
Arteta welcomes Madueke and Saka's competition for places
-
France and India hail growing ties as Modi hosts Macron
-
Warner Bros. says reopening talks with Paramount on its buyout offer
-
Slalom showdown Shiffrin's last chance for Milan-Cortina medal
-
Protesters march in Kosovo, as ex-president's war crimes trial nears end
-
No pressure on India opener Abhishek after two ducks, says coach
-
Sakamoto eyes figure skating gold in Olympic farewell
-
Pereira 'trusts' Forest owner Marinakis despite three sackings this season
-
AI 'arms race' risks human extinction, warns top computing expert
-
Israeli bobsleigher dismisses Olympics 'diatribe' by Swiss TV commentator
-
Supreme leader says Iran can sink US warship as Geneva talks conclude
-
Australia, Ireland out of T20 World Cup as Zimbabwe qualify after washout
-
Greece experts to examine Nazi atrocity photos find
-
Los Angeles mayor calls for 2028 Olympics chairman to step down over Epstein files
-
Evenepoel takes UAE Tour lead with time-trial win
-
Oil prices rise as Trump ramps up Iran threats
Algerian attack survivor vows to be heard in court battle with award-winning author
Saada Arbane has lived without a voice since her throat was slit during the Algerian civil war. But now, the 31-year-old woman has vowed to make herself heard after she said a best-selling novel plagiarised her life.
Kamel Daoud's novel "Houris" -- banned in Algeria and awarded France's top literary prize Prix Goncourt last year -- tells the story of a child who loses her voice when an Islamist cuts her throat during the 1990s war.
Last November, Arbane took the literary world by storm when she announced on Algerian television, using a speech aid, that the novel's main character was based on her experiences without her consent.
She said the book's details were too similar to the personal stories she had narrated during years of treatment with her psychotherapist, Aicha Dahdouh -- who is Daoud's wife.
Daoud, 54, has denied his novel is based on Arbane's life, but the woman who is suing him both in France and Algeria has vowed to "defend (her) integrity".
Court hearings have begun in the French case, while according to Paris's foreign ministry, Algerian authorities have issued two arrest warrants against Daoud following Arbane's complaint.
Speaking through a breathing tube, Arbane was barely audible in a video call with AFP from Algeria. She later answered questions in written responses.
She said she had been a victim as a child when she lost relatives, including both of her parents, during the attack in 2000.
"But now, I am an adult, a woman, a mother who knows how to say stop, even if I no longer have a voice," she wrote.
- 'Betrayed' -
"The novel draws directly from the most intimate parts of my life, which I shared in a medical setting," she said.
"I felt betrayed, humiliated," she added. "Clearly, what I read in that novel amounts to a violation of medical confidentiality and of my privacy."
Now married and a mother, she said her therapy sessions had been "highjacked to become literary material".
"It's not just a mistake," she added. "It's a professional, legal, human and ethical failing."
Filed complaints outlined several alleged similarities between Arbane and Aube, the novel's protagonist: the breathing tube, a slashed throat, identical scar and tattoos, and a hair salon both she and Aube owned.
Daoud has denied modelling the novel on the content of her therapy sessions. He said in December "everyone" knew the story in Algeria. "It's public knowledge."
But she disagrees.
For him to say that, Arbane told AFP, "amounts to dispossessing me a second time of my truth and voice. This is an attempt to make light of something very serious."
"My story has never been public," she said.
- 'Terrible dispossession' -
Daoud also suggested that Arbane was being manipulated by the Algerian government in what his publisher described as "violent defamatory campaigns" against him.
"To say I'm being used by the Algerian authorities is just a cowardly attempt to discredit my words by politicising them," she responded.
Arbane said her main ordeal now was "reawakened traumas".
"I felt a terrible sense of dispossession, the impression that what I had lived through was banal, that I was at the mercy of anyone -- a killer, like the first time, or a man, an author," she said.
She said Daoud's wife, with whom she later developed a friendship, had repeatedly approached her asking if she would allow the author to write about her life -- and each time, she said, she turned down the proposal.
"I launched these legal proceedings in France and Algeria to defend my integrity and to say that... forgotten stories deserve respect," she said.
"I'm not trying to censor a writer. I'm trying to have a real and very serious harm acknowledged."
J.Williams--AMWN