SPIEGEL ONLINE - December 21, 2006, 12:36 PM
URL: http://www.spiegel.de/international/0,1518,455880,00.html
DANISH ART STUNT IN TEHRAN
Advert Pokes Fun at Ahmadinejad

A Danish art group that specializes in targeting world leaders has 
succeeded in offending its latest victim -- right on his home territory. 
They managed to smuggle an advert insulting the Iranian president into a 
Tehran newspaper.

The Danes certainly seem to enjoy stirring things up. Last year it was 
the cartoons satirizing the Prophet Muhammad. This year it's an ad 
insulting Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad. Except this time things 
are a little different. A Danish art group that specializes in poking 
fun at world leaders, managed to send in a Trojan horse -- and get their 
insult published in Tehran itself.

At first glance the advertisement placed in the Tehran newspaper on 
Wednesday seemed to be declaring support for the Iranian leader. Beneath 
an image of the hard-line president, there was a series of apparently 
sympathetic statements such as "Support his fight against Bush," or 
"Iran has the right to produce nuclear energy." However, on closer 
inspection things were not quite so benign: the first letters of each 
phrase when read from top to bottom spelt out the less than subtle 
insult "S-W-I-N-E."

The half-page advert, attributed to "Danes for World Peace," appeared in 
the English-language Tehran Times. The conservative daily had failed to 
detect the hidden message when it agreed to run the ad. It had taken at 
face value the Danes' claim to want to show their solidarity with Iran 
and to make amends for the publication of the Muhammad cartoons in a 
Danish newspaper last year. However, the impact of the advert is likely 
to be limited, as the Tehran Times has a tiny circulation of only a few 
thousand.

The art group Surrend that was behind the prank has a history of 
targeting authoritarian leaders, including Zimbabwe's Robert Mugabe and 
Belarussian President Alexander Lukaschenko. They said they wanted to 
poke fun at Ahmadinejad "because we don't think he's very liberal or 
sensitive." Jan Egesborg, a member of the group who teaches at the 
Danish School of Fine Art, told Reuters, "We think he represents an 
extreme ideology." He added "We did it to cause a reaction. There is a 
young population there which wants more liberalization. Hopefully they 
will be inspired."

Of course Ahmadinejad has probably got more important things on his mind 
than the shenanigans of a few Scandinavian artists. He has just seen his 
hard-line allies resoundingly trounced at the ballot box by his 
opponents, both moderate conservatives and reformists. The final results 
for the local elections confirm his political set- back. In Tehran his 
supporters only won three out of 15 council seats and nationwide they 
secured just 20 percent of local council seats. In many key cities, his 
candidates didn't win any seats at all.

The vote is widely seen as a rejection of Ahmadinejad's populist policy 
of antagonizing the West and Israel, rather than tackling Iran's high 
unemployment numbers and struggling economy.

A leading reformist Saeed Shariati said the electoral bashing was a "big 
no" to the president and his allies. Shariati, a member of the Islamic 
Iran Participation Front, told AP, "The people's vote means they don't 
support Ahmadinejad's policies and want change."

smd/reuters/ap

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