Outrage
spread in the Middle East on Thursday after more European
newspapers published cartoons that Muslims say insult Islam and the
Prophet Mohammad.
Tunisia and Morocco banned copies of the French tabloid France
Soir, which on Wednesday reprinted cartoons originally published by
Danish daily Jyllands-Posten last September. Muslims consider any
images of Mohammad to be blasphemous.
In the Gulf state of Qatar, the Carrefour supermarket said it had
stopped selling products from Denmark.
Presidents Hosni Mubarak of Egypt and Mahmoud Ahmadinejad of Iran
joined the criticism of the cartoons, which have provoked
widespread protests and boycotts against Denmark.
"Muslims should display firm reaction to such disgraceful acts,"
state television quoted Ahmadinejad as saying in a telephone
conversation with King Abdullah of Saudi Arabia.
Mubarak said freedom of the press, cited by European media and
politicians, should not be an excuse for insulting religions.
Many Arab commentators said the European defence rang hollow
because, they said, European media protected Judaism and Israel
from criticism.
Some called for punishment of the offenders but others said Arabs
had more important things to mobilise against, such as the presence
of US military bases in the region.
"The least we have to do is boycott those who offended us by not
buying their products," said influential Muslim cleric Youssef
al-Qaradawi. "We thought it was only Denmark and Norway ... but
several European countries and newspapers started re-printing these
extremely offending pictures."
Newspapers in France, Germany, Spain, Switzerland and Hungary have
reprinted the caricatures this week, saying press freedom was more
important than the protests and boycotts they have
provoked.
Deliberate provocation
Some Muslims, however, saw the cartoons as deliberate
provocation.
"It's no longer a matter of freedom of thought or opinion or
belief. It's a plot hatched against Islam and Muslims, the
preparation of which began many years ago," former editor Samir
Ragab wrote in the Egyptian state daily el-Gomhuria.
"If practical concerted measures are not taken, the campaign will
become more ferocious," he added.
"They promote their hatred under the pretext of freedom of
expression and turn a blind eye to the crimes that are committed in
the name of Christianity and more dangerously Judaism," said
columnist Mohammad Kharoub in the Jordanian daily al-Rai.
Saudi commentator Hussein Shobokshi, in the pan-Arab daily Asharq
al-Awsat, said the West had inconsistent moral criteria. "If the
Danish cartoon had been about a Jewish rabbi, it would never have
been published," he said.
But some liberal commentators questioned the wisdom of pressing an
issue they saw as secondary.
"This active movement against the insults to the Prophet has been
absent on many other issues which are no less important," Saad
Hagras wrote in Egypt's Nadhet Misr.
"It is discouraging that the collective energy of the Muslim world
is consumed punishing a small European country over a drawing,
while U.S. military bases infest the heart of the Arab world,"
Palestinian-American Ramzy Baroud said in Egypt's English-language
al-Ahram Weekly.
"Too much attention"
As'ad AbuKhalil, a Lebanese-born academic based in California, said
Arab governments were inciting the campaign "to channel the
political anger of their citizens".
"They would not dare to lead a campaign against Israel, so let them
bash Denmark and Norway," he said.
Sami Yusuf, a British Muslim singer of Azeri origin currently
touring Egypt, said the campaign gave the cartoonists and their
publishers too much attention.
"I'm not saying turn a blind eye, but we shouldn't make too much of
an issue out of it because we are giving them publicity, we're
making them famous," he said.
The leader of Lebanon's Shi'ite Hizbollah group said the
cartoonists would have thought twice if Muslims had fulfilled a
1989 edict by late Iranian leader Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini to
kill Britain's Salman Rushdie over his novel The Satanic
Verses.
"Had a Muslim carried out Imam Khomeini's fatwa against the
apostate Salman Rushdie, then those lowlifers would not have dared
discredit the Prophet, not in Denmark, Norway or France," said
Sayyed Hassan Nasrallah.
Cartoon outrage spreads in Mideast
Published: 7:39AM Friday February 03, 2006 Source: Reuters
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