Published: 7:31AM Thursday March 11, 2010
Source: Reuters
Published: 7:31AM Thursday March 11, 2010
Source: Reuters
Swedish cartoonist Lars Vilk in Stockholm - Source: Reuters
The Swedish cartoonist whose sketch of the Prophet Mohammad has made him the target of Muslim anger said he had received more death threats since arrests were made this week over an alleged plot to kill him.
Lars Vilks, whose sketch had shown the Prophet Mohammad with the
body of a dog, said the death threats had been made in internet
messages following the arrests by police in Ireland of seven people
in connection with the alleged murder plot.
He said he had received a large number of threats since 2007, when
his sketch was first published, but new ones were sent to him on
Tuesday.
"They wanted to shoot me in the head with a shotgun," Vilks said,
referring to one of the latest messages.
"The other one was also about killing me."
Irish police said they had detained four men and three women in
southern Ireland as part of an investigation into a murder
conspiracy.
A security source said the investigation was into a plot to
murder Vilks.
In 2007, an Iraqi group linked to al Qaeda offered a $US100,000
reward for Vilks' killing.
The 63-year-old, who continues to live at his home in southern
Sweden and has no bodyguards, said he had no regrets about drawing
the cartoons.
"If you mean to be a serious artist ... this will be the outcome
sometimes - that you will bump into borders with unseen
consequences," he said.
Vilks said he had no political motive.
"The only stand I have is the freedom of speech. I am interested in
watching the battle going on, and the debate."
Vilks says he has prepared a secure room in his house with
barricades in case of any break-in.
In January, a Somali man was indicted on charges of terrorism and
attempted murder for breaking into the home of Danish cartoonist
Kurt Westergaard and threatening him with an axe.
A cartoon by Westergaard in 2005 which depicted the Prophet
Mohammad with a turban shaped like a bomb sparked outrage across
the Muslim world, with at least 50 people killed in riots in the
Middle East, Africa and Asia.
Most Muslims consider any depiction of the founder of Islam as
offensive.
Vilks expects the death threats may intensify in the days ahead due
to the arrests in Ireland but said he plans to go about his regular
activities unless advised by the Swedish police of a higher level
of threat.
"I thought I was of lesser interest and that I should be forgotten
in a way," Vilks said.
"Becoming a star means you will not be forgotten, you will be an
even more interesting target."
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