2005-2014

26 February 2006

Dane-in-the-street view of cartoon issue

HERE in Denmark the Muhammad cartoon issue continues to dominate the headlines. Politiken, the paper we get at home, has been running a special report on Egypt’s role in communicating the matter to other Islamic countries and international Islamic organizations, as well as warning the Danish government. Thus the paper has helped throw new light on the development of the affair, including to which...

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25 February 2006

Turner steps down from Time Warner

NEW YORK - Ted Turner, the mercurial media visionary who founded CNN, said Friday that he wouldn't seek re-election to the board of Time Warner. Turner, who is 67, became a director of Time Warner in 1996 when the media conglomerate bought his cable networks company Turner Broadcasting Systems. He long held a prominent role in guiding Time Warner's affairs, but in recent years complained of being...

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25 February 2006

Belarusian newspaper reprints prophet drawings

MINSK, BELARUS - A small independent newspaper in Belarus has reprinted the cartoons of Prophet Muhammad that set off violent riots across the Muslim world, an editor said this week. The government condemned the publication and said it was not in line with its policy. The European Union's representative to Sudan said the controversy over the prophet drawings sparked attacks on foreign aid workers...

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25 February 2006

Iraq journalists must resist call to pick up arms: INSI

The International News Safety Institute (INSI) has pleaded with journalists to resist calls to carry guns in Iraq following the gruesome murders of three more news staff. The Iraq correspondent for Al Arabiya, Atwar Bahjat, cameraman Khaled Mahmoud Al Falahi and technician Adnan Khairallah were shot by unidentified gunmen near Samarra on February 23 as they covered the attack on the holy sites in...

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25 February 2006

Even funeral procession of murdered journalists comes under attack in Iraq

At least three members of Iraq's security forces were killed Saturday in an attack on the funeral procession of an Al Arabiya journalist killed earlier in the week, the Arab television station and police said, according to Reuters. NOT SPARING EVEN THE DEAD: A grab taken from Al Arabiya television footage shows people carry the body of Atwar Bahjat, an Al Arabiya correspondent, during her funeral...

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25 February 2006

False news puts Turkish mediation at risk over cartoon row

A possible mediator role Turkey was expected to play to resolve the cartoon controversy is now at risk over a news report published by some Danish newspaper on Namik Tan, the Turkish Foreign Ministry spokesman, which was later proven by Mr. Tan himself to be false. The Danish daily, Information, quoted Mr. Tan as saying that the Turkish government demands an officially-acknowledged apology from...

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25 February 2006

Senior India publisher gets bail in cartoon case

NEW DELHI: A Delhi court on Saturday granted bail to Vijay Dixit, publisher of Senior Media Limited, who was arrested for publishing cartoons depicting Prophet Mohammed in a periodical brought out by the company. Metropolitan Magistrate Chandra Shekhar granted bail to Dixit, whose group brings out the fortnightly magazine 'Senior India', on his furnishing a bail bond of Rs 50,000 with one surety...

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25 February 2006

Multicultural Europe blamed for cartoon crisis

European countries are paying the price for their "miscalculations" on Islam, which have come back to haunt them in the crisis over cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad, according to the most influential leader of France's Muslim community, the biggest on the continent. Dalil Boubakeur says Europe's mistakes include supporting extremist Islamic groups in Iran and Afghanistan during the cold war...

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25 February 2006

PM accepts NST’s apology, considers issue closed

KEPALA BATAS: Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi has accepted the New Straits Times’ (NST) front-page apology over a cartoon it published last Monday. Abdullah said no action would be taken against the newspaper following its open apology yesterday. "The NST has conceded to the Government's decision and I take it that they are very regretful over the issue," he said after opening a...

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25 February 2006

Online cartoons depicting Jesus cause stir at Radford University

RADFORD, Va. -- Online cartoons depicting Jesus that satirize televangelists, the commercialization of Christmas and other issues have caused a stir among both Christian and non-Christian students and administrators at Radford University. In his "Christ on Campus" comic strip on the Whim Internet Magazine, Christian Keesee has featured Jesus being stabbed by Santa Claus, playing poker with other...

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