More papers join cartoon furore
by
Wednesday 01 February 2006 1:21 PM GMT

A Danish newspaper was the first to publish the cartoons

Both a French and a German newspaper have reprinted a series of 12
Danish newspaper cartoons depicting Prophet Muhammad that have 
sparked
protests in the Muslim world.

With a mounting diplomatic storm, calls for a boycott of Danish goods
and flag-burning protests, Danish security police met Muslim religious
leaders in an attempt to contain any domestic reaction to cartoons
first run by the Jyllands-Posten paper.

Police said they had won a pledge from Denmark's imams to work to
prevent an escalation of the row while the France Soir daily said it
had published the cartoons in the name of freedom of expression and to
fight religious intolerance.

"Because no religious dogma can impose its view on a democratic and
secular society, France Soir publishes the incriminated cartoons," the
paper said.

Under a headline "Yes, we have the right to caricature God", the paper
ran a front page cartoon with Buddha, the Christian and Jewish Gods
and Prophet Muhammad sitting on a cloud above Earth, with the
Christian God saying: "Don't complain Muhammad, we've all been
caricatured here."

Unapologetic

France Soir, which is in financial difficulties and looking for a
buyer, devoted two inside pages to the Danish cartoons, with editor
Serge Faubert unapologetic.

"There is no right to protection from satire in the West; there is a
right to blasphemy"

Serge Faubert
France Soir editor
"Enough lessons from these reactionary bigots! There is nothing in
these incriminated cartoons that intends to be racist or denigrate any
community as such," he wrote in a commentary.

"Some are funny, others less so. That's it. That is why we have 
decided to publish them."

The German Welt daily put one of the drawings on its front page on
Wednesday, saying the picture was "harmless" and regretting that the
Danish Jyllands-Posten daily had apologised for causing offense. 

"Democracy is the institutionalised form of freedom of expression,"
the paper said in a front-page commentary. 

"There is no right to protection from satire in the West; there is a
right to blasphemy."

Outcry

The cartoons caused an uproar in the Arab and Muslim world.

There have been protests across
the Muslim world

Thousands of Palestinians protested against Denmark for allowing
publication of the cartoons and Arab ministers called on it to punish
the newspaper that first printed them.

Saudi Arabia has recalled its ambassador from Copenhagen and Libya has
closed its embassy.

Qatar condemned the cartoons.

Jyllands-Posten has apologised for any hurt caused, but the 
government says it cannot tell free media what to do.

Business losses

Danish-Swedish dairy product maker Arla Foods, with annual Middle East
sales of 3 billion Danish crowns ($488 million), said it was talking
to unions about 140 job cuts due to the boycott.

Some Arab countries have pulled
Danish products from the shelves
"We are losing around 10 million crowns per day at the moment," a
spokeswoman said.

The world's biggest maker of insulin, Novo Nordisk, said it was also
hit as pharmacies and hospitals in Saudi Arabia have avoided its
products since Saturday.

Islam sees images of its prophet as disrespectful and caricatures as
blasphemous. One of the drawings published in September seemed to
portray Prophet Muhammad as a terrorist.

A Norwegian paper has also reprinted the cartoons this year.

French Muslims quiet

There was no comment on the France Soir move from the leaders of the
French Council of the Muslim Faith (CFCM), a body set up to represent
France's 5 million Muslims.

French relations with Muslims have been strained by a 2004 law 
banning religious symbols in state schools, which prohibited the
wearing of Muslim headscarves, Jewish skullcaps and large Christian
crosses in secular state schools.

Meanwhile, media watchdog Reporters Without Borders (RSF) voiced alarm
on Wednesday over a call by Arab states for Denmark to punish the
authors of newspaper cartoons depicting Prophet Muhammad.

Media rights

RSF Secretary General Robert Menard told AFP he was "extremely 
worried by the reaction of Arab regimes, which betrays a lack of
understanding of the nature of press freedom."

Muslim anger over the 12 caricatures has boiled over into a 
diplomatic crisis threatening Danish trade relations with the Muslim
world. 


Press freedom extends "to include the publication of information that
is shocking for the population. The European Court of Human Rights
says so. It is an essential accomplishment of democracy," he argued.

Robert Menard
Secretary General, Reporters Without Borders (RSF)
Commenting on a call issued by Arab interior ministers for Copenhagen
to "firmly sanction" the cartoons' authors, Menard said "the reaction
shows very well the idea that they have (of press-government
relations) when they ask the Danish government to intervene."

Arab regimes "do not understand that there can be a complete 
separation between what is written in a newspaper and what the Danish
government says," Menard told AFP.

Denmark ranks among the world's top four or five countries in terms of
respect for press freedom, according to the Paris-based RSF.

On the broader question of whether the Jyllands-Posten was right to
have published the cartoons, Menard said "there was no need for
discussion."

Press freedom extends "to include the publication of information that
is shocking for the population. The European Court of Human Rights
says so. It is an essential accomplishment of democracy," he argued.

"All the countries in Europe should be behind the Danes and the 
Danish authorities to defend the principle that a newspaper can 
writes what it wishes to ... even if it offends people," he said.

Anti-Muslim protests

Also on Wednesday, police in Copenhagen said they were bracing for
anti-Muslim protests in the Danish capital in reaction to Muslim anger
over the cartoons' publication.

Deputy police director Mogens Kjaergaard Moeller said: "We are aware
that there are calls from several groups circulating, notably on the
internet, for protests. We are ready."

He said he was aware of "rumours" that Danish right-wing youths were
planning anti-Muslim protests in the central Town Hall Square, but
police had not received a request for permission to hold a
demonstration.

"Obviously ... we are watching what is happening very closely. That is
reflected in our current security level in Copenhagen," he said.

"We are maintaining the very high level that we already have in 
place," he added.

According to Danish news agency Ritzau, Danish youths may burn copies
of the Quran in order to demonstrate their "distance to Islam".

The protest could also be held on Saturday.

Agencies
By 

You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/90F10D46-A67C-47C6-B340-
1A95D5921BB8.htm
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Jusfiq Hadjar gelar Sutan Maradjo Lelo
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Orang Islam tipikal kudu sadar bahwa al-Mushaf itu TIDAK berbukti berisi wahyu 
Allah
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