2005-2014

23 February 2006

Microsoft exposes itself in bid to embarrass Europeans

Microsoft is accusing the European Commission (EC) of denying it a fair defense in its long-running anti-trust case, so officials could nip off early for their Christmas holls. That's just one of the claims Microsoft is laying at the door of the EC - a fact learned today after Redmond took the unprecidented step of publishing confidential documents and correspondence used in the case. Microsoft...

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23 February 2006

WSJ targets affluent men with new style magazine

LONDON - The Wall Street Journal Europe is to launch a style magazine aimed at high-income executives with former Esquire editor Peter Howarth at the helm, as the financial paper tries to draw in luxury goods advertisers. With a working title of Style Journal, the magazine is to be published by Howarth's contract publishing business, Show Media, and will be launched in April. Howarth said: "Style...

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23 February 2006

Cartoon furore has become press freedom crisis: CPJ

Controversy over the publication of drawings of the Prophet Mohammed continued to grow as an international press freedom crisis on Thursday as Indian authorities imprisoned a magazine editor and Belarusian prosecutors opened a criminal probe into a weekly newspaper. In each case, the publications said they printed one or more cartoons to provide context for the worldwide furore that has now...

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22 February 2006

Muslim hackers hit 3,000 Danish Web sites

WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (UPI) -- Muslim hackers angered by the publication of cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed have defaced nearly 3,000 Danish Web sites over the past month in the biggest politically motivated cyber attack long-time observers have ever seen. Experts say that the world-wide protests over a Danish newspaper's decision to publish the caricatures, an act offensive to Muslims who regard...

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22 February 2006

Yemeni on trial for cartoons says was defending Islam

SANAA, Feb 22 (Reuters) - A Yemeni editor on trial for reprinting cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed said he had done so to show Muslims how insulting they were, not to deride Islam. Now Mohammad al-Asaadi, editor-in-chief of the English daily Yemen Observer, says Islamists could kill him for his action. "The problem now is not the trial," he told Reuters on Wednesday from a cage in a Sanaa...

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22 February 2006

Outside view: Cartoons and terror

WASHINGTON, Feb. 22 (UPI) -- One of the toughest battles facing America and Europe in the war on terrorism is the campaign to convince Muslims around that world that the West is not really engaged in a war on Islam. The cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad carried in newspapers in Denmark and elsewhere in Europe have made the battle a lot harder to win. While newspapers that have published the...

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22 February 2006

Muslim who ran cartoons are paying price

AMMAN: In a direct challenge to the international uproar over cartoons lampooning the Prophet Muhammad, the Jordanian journalist Jihad Momani wrote: "What brings more prejudice against Islam: these caricatures, or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras or a suicide bomber who blows himself up during a wedding ceremony?" An editor in Yemen, Muhammad al...

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22 February 2006

Belarus weekly slammed over Muhammad cartoons

MINSK, 22 February 2006 (RFE/RL) -- The Belarusian Foreign Ministry has condemned the decision of an independent Minsk publication to reprint controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. "Zhoda," a weekly, reprinted the cartoons on 17 February to illustrate an article about the deadly protests sparked by the images across the Muslim world. The Foreign Ministry said the publication was "clearly...

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22 February 2006

EU ministers clash on media libel and defamation rules

EUOBSERVER / BRUSSELS - EU justice ministers have agreed to halt far-reaching plans to establish common EU rules on cross-border disputes, following fears that parts of the law would violate freedom of expression. The proposed law aims to define which national law applies in disputes where individuals or companies from different countries are involved, including non-EU member states. However...

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22 February 2006

India's first caroon casualty: Editor of magazine arrested in Delhi

NEW DELHI: The editor of a magazine here was arrested on Wednesday for publishing the caricatures of Prophet Mohammed. Police said the newly launched magazine "Senior India" had carried the caricatures in an edition that hit the stands on January 15. Editor Alok Tomar was initially called to a police station for questioning and later arrested when he admitted to publishing the caricatures. "We...

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