Posted on 02/01/2006 9:41:48 AM PST by Dark Skies
PARIS, February 1, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) French Muslim leaders on Wednesday, February 1, denounced in unison the reprinting of a series of explosive cartoons blasphemous to Prophet Muhammad (PBUH) by a French daily and vowed to take the case to French courts.
We call on French Muslims to peacefully protest this aggression on the Prophet of Islam, the French Council for the Muslim Religion (CFCM) said in a statement after a meeting chaired by its head Dalil Boubackeur.
Boubakeurs call was echoed by Lhaj Thami Breze, the head of the Union of French Islamic Organizations (UOIF), who blasted the provocative and unnecessary publication.
Paris daily France Soir said it had decided to reprint them not from an appetite for gratuitous provocation, but because they constitute the subject of a controversy on a global scale which has done nothing to maintain balance and mutual limits in democracy, respect of religious beliefs and freedom of expression.
Now they want an apology from a society characterized with freedom of expression and religion at a time when they deny their peoples the right to free speech.
It continued: We will give no heed to their objections and insist on drawing pictures of Muhammad, Jesus and Buddha, which has everything to do with the freedom of expression we do enjoy in our society.
Published last September by the Danish mass-circulation Jyllands-Posten, the 12 cartoons included portrayals of the Prophet wearing a time-bomb shaped turban and showed him as a knife-wielding nomad flanked by shrouded women.
Initially passing with little comment, they were reprinted in several European newspapers, adding fuel to the already raging flames in the Muslim world.
The Danish newspaper apologized for offending Muslims by publishing the cartoons, saying, These cartoons were not in violation of Danish law but have irrefutably offended many Muslims, and for that we apologize.
Bankruptcy
The heavily-indebted paper opted for reprinting the blasphemous cartoons to boost its declining sales and shift the attention from strikes staged by its reporters and editors at unpaid salaries and unknown future, sources close to the daily told IOL on condition not to be named.
A group of editors and employees submitted a petition on December 19 to the prime minister to save their paper, which is owned by Egyptian-French Raymond Lakah, from bankruptcy as they faced sacking.
The papers bankruptcy, no doubt, played a key role, said Breze.
The papers act is ridiculous and irresponsible, added Al-Arabi Kashat, the imam Al-Dawa mosque in Paris.
They offended up to one billion Muslims worldwide, he fumed. Even non-Muslims and those who dont believe in Muhammad must respect the greatest figures that made history, he added.
Kashat said the world is in a dire need of peace, which should be based on respect of the others belief.
We should stand up firmly to those who are trying to ignite sectarian sedition among peoples, he added.
The French Foreign Ministry evaded a clear condemnation of the re-publication.
The paper, not the government, is to blame for the publication, a ministrys spokeswoman told IOL.
In a democratic and secular country like France, we should, however, respect religions but free speech is a sacred right on the condition that it neither violates privacies nor incites hatred, she added.
The Muslim world's two main political bodies -- the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Arab League -- said Sunday, January 29, they were seeking a UN resolution, backed by possible sanctions, to protect religions in response to the furor.
Danish embassies in the Middle East have been the scenes of protests, a Danish flag was burnt by angry Palestinian demonstrators in Gaza and Gulf retailers pulled Danish products off their shelves.
Excuse me for being picky, but shouldn't that be HUGH manatee?
I may get flamed for this, but I do understand the Muslims' indignation over their perceived attack on their religious symbols & leaders. I don't like to see religion in general maligned, whether or not it's my own. Usually, that's an atheist's game.
However, I do not have much active sympathy for the Muslims, given their own abysmal human rights record & their own harassment of other religious & ethnic groups (not to mention women). It's the very "freedom of expression" in the West that allows them to spew their own invectives. If the comics must be banned, so too should their mullahs.
Well, at least no one died or got physically hurt.
Soon the only thing on Islamic supermarket shelves will be camel pet food.
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