The Cartoon Row

21 February 2006

CPJ expresses alarm at closure of second Russian paper

The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has expressed alarm at the closure of a second Russian newspaper that published religious cartoons related to the controversy over Danish drawings of the Prophet Mohammed. The weekly Nash Region in the city of Vologda ran a montage of the Danish cartoons on February 15, with some doctored or printed only partially, international and local media reported...

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20 February 2006

Pointing the finger

Feb. 20, 2006 issue - When Hamas called for the Muslim world to calm down last week, European officials hoped they'd turned a corner. They'd been looking frantically for a way out of the clash of civilizations sparked by the publication of cartoons caricaturing the Prophet Muhammad. Danish Embassies were burned in Damascus and Beirut. Afghan riots led to at least 11 deaths. Another protester was...

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20 February 2006

Muhammad cartoon protests spark attacks on Christians

ABUJA, 20 Feb 2006 (IRIN) - At least 17 people, including a Catholic priest, were killed and 30 churches burned in the northeast Nigerian city of Maiduguri when Muslims protesting cartoons caricaturing the Prophet Muhammad turned on local Christians, police said. Nigerian police spokesman Haz Iwendi said a crowd of protesters in the predominantly Muslim city targeted the Christian minority...

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20 February 2006

Vologda newspaper shut down over Muhammad cartoons

Vologda, February 20, Interfax - A newspaper in Vologda was shut down by its owners after it reprinted the Danish cartoons satirizing the Prophet Muhammad, Mikhail Smirnov, the owner of the Severinform information holding to which the newspaper belongs, told the press. "The decision to close down the newspaper was made in order to ward off attacks on anyone in the editorial team," Smirnov said....

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20 February 2006

EU chief queries Danish cartoon decision

BRUSSELS, Belgium (UPI) -- The European Union`s homeland security chief suggested Monday that the Danish paper Jyllands-Posten was wrong to have published 12 caricatures of the prophet Mohammed. Since the cartoons` republication last month, almost 50 protestors have died in violent demonstrations, Christian churches have been torched and European and American embassies have been attacked across...

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20 February 2006

OIC resolves to raise blasphemy issue at UN

UNITED NATIONS, Feb 18: The envoys of Organisation of Islamic Conference on Friday resolved to raise the issue of the publication of blasphemous cartoons in the United Nations General Assembly and establish a common position on the issue to reflect the sentiments and reactions of Muslims around the world. An extraordinary meeting of the OIC ambassadors was held to consider a proposal by Pakistan’s...

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20 February 2006

OIC plans emergency meeting on cartoon issue

JEDDAH – The Organisation of Islamic Conference (OIC) is planning an emergency meeting of foreign ministers of the member states to discuss major issues including the repercussions of the blasphemous cartoons, it was learnt here on Saturday. Secretary-General Professor Ekmeleddin Ihsanoglu is in the process of contacting member states for the purpose. According to diplomatic sources, he has...

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20 February 2006

Saudi paper 'shut' in cartoon row

A newspaper in Saudi Arabia has stopped publishing after printing some of the cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad. Shams (Sun) has been suspended as part of an investigation into its decision to publish the cartoons that have caused anger across the Muslim world. It printed them next to articles urging Saudis to take action against Denmark where the cartoons first appeared. Three weeks ago, Shams...

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20 February 2006

Denmark, Norway condemn cartoon bounty as "murder"

COPENHAGEN - Denmark and Norway on Monday condemned as incitement to murder a Pakistani cleric’s offer of a reward to anyone who kills any of the 12 Danish cartoonists who lampooned the Prophet Muhammad (PBUH). "It’s murder and murder is also forbidden by the Koran," Danish Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller told a news conference with his colleague Jonas Gahr Stoere from Norway, which has been...

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20 February 2006

Al-Qaida to exploit Mohammed cartoon row

COPENHAGEN, Denmark, Feb. 20 (UPI) -- Denmark's Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller has warned al-Qaida will try to exploit Muslim anger over the cartoons of Prophet Mohammed. He also called a $1 million offer by a Pakistani cleric to kill the cartoonists an incitement to murder and "un-Islamic," reports the BBC. The cartoons were first printed in Denmark. Muslim protests around the world have...

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