
Author Salman Rushdie's attacker sentenced to 25 years in prison
The British-American author did not attend the sentencing but submitted a victim impact statement.
Matar also faces separate federal terrorism charges that carry a maximum penalty of life in prison.
Video of the attack was played during the trial and showed Matar rushing the stage and plunging a knife into Rushdie.
'It was a stab wound in my eye, intensely painful, after that I was screaming because of the pain,' Rushdie told jurors, adding that he was left in a 'lake of blood.'
Matar — who shouted pro-Palestinian slogans on several occasions during the trial — stabbed Rushdie about 10 times with a six-inch blade.
He previously told media he had only read two pages of Rushdie's The Satanic Verses, but believed the author had 'attacked Islam'.
Matar's lawyers had sought to prevent witnesses from characterising Rushdie as a victim of persecution following Iran's 1989 fatwa calling for his murder over supposed blasphemy in the novel.
Iran has denied any link to the attacker and said only Rushdie was to blame for the incident.
Life-threatening injuries
The optical nerve of Rushdie's right eye was severed in the attack.
His Adam's apple was lacerated, his liver and small bowel penetrated, and he became paralysed in one hand after suffering severe nerve damage to his arm.
Rushdie was rescued from Matar by bystanders. Last year, he published a memoir called Knife in which he recounted the near-death experience.
His publisher announced in March that The Eleventh Hour, a collection of short stories examining themes and places of interest to Rushdie, will be released on November 4, 2025.
Rushdie, who was born in Mumbai but moved to England as a boy, was propelled into the spotlight with his second novel Midnight's Children (1981), which won Britain's prestigious Booker Prize for its portrayal of post-independence India.
But The Satanic Verses brought him far greater, mostly unwelcome, attention.
Rushdie became the centre of a fierce tug-of-war between free speech advocates and those who insisted that insulting religion, particularly Islam, was unacceptable under any circumstance.
Books and bookshops were torched, his Japanese translator was murdered and his Norwegian publisher was shot several times.
Rushdie lived in seclusion in London for a decade after the 1989 fatwa, but for the past 20 years — until the attack — he lived relatively normally in New York.

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