Published: 10:59PM Monday May 16, 2005
Source: Reuters
Muslims in Afghanistan and Pakistan were sceptical about an
apparent retraction by Newsweek magazine of a report that US
interrogators desecrated the Koran and said US pressure was behind
the climb-down.
The report in Newsweek's May 9 issue sparked protests across the
Muslim world from Afghanistan, where 16 were killed and more than
100 injured, to Pakistan, India, Indonesia and Gaza.
Newsweek said on Sunday the report might not be true.
"We will not be deceived by this," Islamic cleric Mullah Sadullah
Abu Aman told Reuters in the northern Afghan province of
Badakhshan, referring to the magazine's retraction.
"This is a decision by America to save itself. It comes because of
American pressure. Even an ordinary illiterate peasant understands
this and won't accept it."
Aman was the leader of a group of clerics who on Sunday vowed to
call for a holy war against the United States in three days unless
it handed over the military interrogators reported to have
desecrated the Koran.
That call for a jihad, or holy war, still stood, he said.
Newsweek originally said investigators probing abuses at the US
military prison at Guantanamo Bay found that interrogators "had
placed Korans on toilets, and in at least one case flushed a holy
book down the toilet".
Muslims consider the Koran the literal word of God and treat each
book with deep reverence.
Last week's bloody anti-American protests across Afghanistan were
the worst since US forces invaded in 2001 to oust the Taliban for
sheltering Osama bin Laden and his al Qaeda network.
"Not certain"
Newsweek said on Sunday its information had come from a
"knowledgeable government source" who told the magazine that a
military report on abuse at Guantanamo Bay said interrogators
flushed at least one copy of the Koran down a toilet in a bid to
make detainees talk.
But Newsweek said the source later said he could not be certain he
had seen an account of the incident in the military report and that
it might have been in other investigative documents or
drafts.
Afghans were unconvinced.
"It's not acceptable now that the magazine says it's made a
mistake," said Hafizullah Torab, 42, a writer and journalist in the
eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad, where the protests began last
Tuesday. "No one will accept it."
"Possibly, the American government put pressure on the magazine to
issue the retraction to avoid the anger of Muslims," said Sayed
Elyas Sedaqat, who heads a cultural group in the city.
In neighbouring Pakistan, a religious party said it was going ahead
with a call for protests on May 27.
"Newsweek is back-tracking but it's not just their report," said
Ghaffar Aziz, a top official of the Jamaat-e-Islami party. "All
innocent people released from US custody have said on the record
that there was desecration of the Koran.
A spokesman for the Taliban, who denied any involvement in last
week's Afghan protests, said the original report was true.
"Newsweek is changing its story because of pressure from the US
government," Abdul Latif Hakimi said by telephone.
In Kabul, a U.S. military spokesman told a news briefing the
Newsweek retraction had no bearing on the US position.
"Any disrespect to the Koran and any other religion is not
tolerated by our culture and our values," said Colonel Jim
Yonts.
Kabul University student Abdul Khaliq said Newsweek should be held
accountable. "If this was a mistake by Newsweek it should be
banned," he said.
At the weekend, President Hamid Karzai urged Washington to punish
anyone found guilty of desecration. The government had no immediate
comment on the Newsweek clarification.
In Pakistan, where a November edition of Newsweek was banned for
publishing a photograph of a woman's body painted with inscriptions
from the Koran, the government last week expressed deep concern
about the Guantanamo report and said perpetrators of the reported
desecration should be held accountable.
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