2005-2014

19 February 2006

Beastly attack on journalist at Imphal beauty pageant

A journalist of the Imphal Free Press covering the Miss Manipur pageant Saturday evening was beaten black and blue by a commando of the Imphal East police station detailed for security at the venue when the scribe was trying to exit the venue. ALL BEAUTIES, NO BEAST HERE: Aircel Miss Manipur Contest 2006 under way February 18 at the Bhagyachandra Open Air Theatre (BOAT) in Manipur capital Imphal...

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19 February 2006

Assam CM says assaulted journalist was "instigating" crowd

The assault of a journalist by the police in Assam last week has been condemned by journalists both in the state as well as abroad. HOPING FOR A WAVE: Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi and Prime Minister Manmohan Singh at a function in Guwahati in November 2004. The attack on a journalist and the subsequent boycott of government functions by journalist comes as more bad news for Gogoi who has been...

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19 February 2006

Chhattisgarh's novel way to counter Naxals: Gun for journalists

Naxalite activities are making the Chhattisgarh government see red everywhere. Pushed on the backfoot over increased Maoist violence in the state, the government has decided one of the ways to control ultra-Left insurgency is by training its guns on the press. MINE ISN'T A RED HAND: Chhattisgarh Chief Minister Raman Singh after storming to power last year. Singh said in the state Assembly Friday,...

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19 February 2006

Iran attacks dissidents over cartoon row

Tehran, Iran, Feb. 19 – Iran criticised its principal opposition movement on Saturday for charging that it was behind the recent violence over cartoons depicting negatively the Islamic prophet Muhammad published in European dailies. A coalition of Iranian dissidents, the National Council of Resistance of Iran (NCRI), had accused Tehran of dispatching several clerics to European and Muslim...

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19 February 2006

Danish paper denies publishing new apology for cartoons in Saudi papers

The Danish newspaper that published the Mohammed cartoons said Sunday that it had not published an apology to Muslims in Saudi Arabian newspapers, but that these newspapers had simply republished an apology posted on its web site earlier this month. Full-page advertisements appeared in Asharq al-Awsat, which is printed around the Arab world, as well as the local al-Riyadh and al-Jazira. "Allow me...

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19 February 2006

Danish apology a hoax?

Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten has denied reports that it was behind an ad published in Arabic-language newspapers to apologize for cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohammad that have sparked deadly protests around the world. Earlier, news agencies reported Saudi Arabian newspapers printed an apology on behalf of the Danish newspaper. The full-page advertisements appeared in al-Sharq al-Awsat...

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19 February 2006

Students back cartoon of Jesus and Muhammad kissing

A student newspaper at Canada's largest university is refusing to back down after publishing a cartoon depicting the Prophet Muhammad and Jesus kissing. The cartoon was published last Wednesday alongside an editorial addressing the debate on whether to publish controversial Danish cartoons that have sparked protest around the world Nick Ragaz, managing editor for the Strand, says the newspaper is...

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19 February 2006

U of T paper defends publication of cartoon

A student newspaper at the University of Toronto will not be pressured into pulling a cartoon from their website of the Prophet Muhammad and Jesus kissing despite demands from the Students' Administrative Council and the Muslim Students' Association, its editor says. "The cartoon is a sort of Canadian statement on religious tolerance," said Nick Ragaz, managing editor of The Strand, the student...

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19 February 2006

Danish paper 'apologizes' for Muhammad cartoons - sort of

RIYADH Saudi newspapers Sunday published full-page apologies by the Danish newspaper that first ran cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad that have touched off violent anti-western protests around the Muslim world. But Jyllands-Posten's website said the newspaper wasn't involved in the ads. It said businesses placed the ad on their own initiative, using an apology issued by the newspaper late last...

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19 February 2006

Saudi papers publish Danish paper's cartoon apology

RIYADH (Reuters) - Saudi Arabian newspapers on Sunday printed an apology by the Danish paper whose cartoons lampooning the Prophet Mohammad have sparked deadly protests around the world. "Allow me in the name of Jyllands-Posten to apologize for what happened and declare my strong condemnation of any step that attacks specific religions, ethnic groups and peoples. I hope that with this I have...

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