Posted on 05/21/2010 6:36:54 AM PDT by Mr. Mojo
(CNSNews.com) The Facebook page at the center of angry protests in Pakistan because of depictions of Mohammed also has been blocked in Saudi Arabia, the latest development in a controversy first sparked almost five years ago by a Danish newspapers publication of cartoons satirizing Mohammed.
The decision by the Saudi Communications and Information Technology Commission does not affect general access to Facebook, according to reports from the kingdom Friday. Muslims consider any images of the prophet who founded Islam in the seventh century to be blasphemous.
Earlier, Pakistans government, amid public protests, barred complete access to the social networking site following an order by the high court in Lahore. The offending page, called Everybody Draw Mohammed Day, invited users to submit cartoons of Mohammed on May 20.
The Pakistan Telecommunication Authority (PTA) went on to block access to YouTube as well, citing sacrilegious content.
PTA director Khurram Mehran said the steps had been taken after it had tried the regular channels, asking administrators of the two Web sites to act against increasing amounts of derogatory material.
It was not clear how long the Facebook ban would be in place the Lahore court order applies until the case comes up for a further hearing on May 31 but a senior lawmaker, Talha Mahmood, called for the ban to be permanent, according to a report in Pakistans The Nation.
Temporary blocking of Facebook is not a solution, said Mahmood, who chairs the Senates standing committee on the interior. It should be closed as anti-Islam elements have been hurting the sentiments of the Muslims in the past too.
The Everybody Draw Mohammed Day on Facebook was sporadically inaccessible outside of Pakistan over the past day, although a spokeswoman responded to queries overnight Thursday by saying the company has not taken any action on this page.
A YouTube spokesperson said the company was looking into the situation in Pakistan and was working to ensure that the service is restored as soon as possible.
This is not the first time Islamic states have blocked the video-sharing site over material it deems offensive to Muslims.
In 2008 Pakistans PTA ordered Internet service providers (ISPs) to block access indefinitely to YouTube, for containing blasphemous web content/movies.
The move then was linked both to the Mohammed cartoons and to the release by Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders of a documentary film entitled Fitna, juxtaposing passages from the Koran with footage of terror attacks and jihadists extolling violence.
Indonesia in 2008 also instructed ISPs to block YouTube and several other Web sites over the Fitna movie.
Pakistans Foreign Office spokesman Abdul Basit said Thursday his government has registered a protest at the U.N. Human Rights Council over the Facebook blasphemy, adding that such actions damage religious harmony.
Pakistan also raised the matter at a meeting of foreign ministers from the Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC), in the Tajikistan capital, Dushanbe.
Negative stereotyping of the Muslims and defamation of Islam have become fashionable under the pretext of freedom of expression, Malik Amad Khan, minister of state for foreign affairs, told the OIC gathering.
He cited Geert Wilders, a referendum in Switzerland banning the construction of minarets, and appalling and outrageous images of Mohammed, saying they had gravely hurt the Muslim sentiments throughout the world.
Coinciding with the latest controversy, the OIC meeting in Dushanbe released the third annual report by a body set up by the bloc to monitor Islamophobia.
In a foreword to the report by the OIC Observatory on Islamophobia, OIC secretary-general Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu wrote that the distortion of Islam geared towards denigrating and dehumanizing Muslims insults the deep seated religious feelings and violates their fundamental rights and dignity thus threatening the multicultural fabric of the societies.
The OIC has for the past decade promoted a campaign at the U.N. to combat what it calls defamation of religion specifically Islam.
The most recent resolution passed last March by a smaller margin than before, prompting Ihsanoglu to urge the blocs 56 member states to close ranks on the issue.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Philip Crowley on Thursday called the Facebook issue difficult and challenging.
We certainly fully understand how material that were posted on this particular page were offensive to Pakistanis and members of other Muslim majority communities around the world, he said.
But at the same time, we do in fact support the universal principle of freedom of expression, free flow of information, and we will continue to promote Internet freedom
he added.
So what, I accuse muzzies of hurting westerners by cutting off their heads, blowing up pizza parlors etc.
Live with it Abdule!
BTTT
I am very proud to be on Facebook.
You left off driving planes into buildings.
muzzie scum.
Facebook caved and took down the main draw Muhammed page. Can’t believe what has happened to this once-great country.
Yeah, suck it up.
There is no requirement for us to cater to your sensibilities,
especially in light of your religion’s barbarous behavior.
They look at our faults with a microscope and their own with blinders on.
Eff the thin-skinned losers.
Just another front in their war of global conquest -
if they can get what they want through whining instead of the sword, so much the better.
They use the invaded host countries’ accomodation against them as they take over.
They look at our faults with a microscope and their own with blinders on.
Eff the thin-skinned losers.
There was a lot of nasty stuff about Jesus Christ on the Everybody Draw Mohammed FB page yesterday.
And although it hurt me to see the lost condemning the same One that died for their sins, I support their choice.
God loved me so much as to give me a choice between Him and death. I am commanded to love others that much as well.
Being a Christian in this world is THE hardest job EVER.
I look forward to next year.
But they left the “against” page up, so the Muslims can boast about their “victory.”
I tried to point out to them that the difference is that we won’t threaten their lives for their opinions. Of course, that fell upon deaf ears.
[In Washington, State Department spokesman Philip Crowley on Thursday called the Facebook issue difficult and challenging. ]
Free Speech against killers is NOT a challenging concept.
They are still going to cut the heads off of all the people they can find that made fun of Mohammad.
Negative stereotyping of the Muslims and defamation of Islam have become fashionable under the pretext of freedom of expression, Malik Amad Khan, minister of state for foreign affairs, told the OIC gathering.
When Freedom of expression is labeled a “pretext”
it’s time to wake up!
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