The Cartoon Row

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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19 February 2006

Why I Published Those Cartoons: Flemming Rose

Childish. Irresponsible. Hate speech. A provocation just for the sake of provocation. A PR stunt. Critics of 12 cartoons of the prophet Muhammad I decided to publish in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten have not minced their words. They say that freedom of expression does not imply an endorsement of insulting people's religious feelings, and besides, they add, the media censor themselves every...

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19 February 2006

China's Muslims, pragmatically, avoid cartoon protests

LINXIA: China Religion is often hidden in China, so the unabashed public display of Islam here in the city known as Little Mecca is particularly striking. Men have beards and wear white caps. Women wear head scarves. Minarets poke up from large mosques. A bookstore sells Korans and religious study guides in Arabic. These are reminders that with almost 21 million followers of Islam, China has...

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19 February 2006

Cartoon protesters defy ban in Pakistan, envoy quits

ISLAMABAD, Feb 19 (Reuters) - Police fired teargas and rubber bullets to break up a banned protest against cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad in Islamabad on Sunday and Denmark said its ambassador to Pakistan had returned home for security reasons. The government banned the demonstration after similar protests in Pakistan turned violent, with at least five people killed in the past week. The...

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18 February 2006

Analysis: Alliance may calm cartoon unrest

WASHINGTON, Feb. 18 (UPI) -- A joint Spanish-Turkish initiative backed by the United Nations is being mentioned as a possible forum for restoring calm between Europe and the Islamic world following the Mohammed cartoon debacle originally triggered by Denmark. This is the Alliance for Civilization, first mentioned in the context of the cartoon crisis by U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan last week...

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18 February 2006

The end of the world was a joke

What if the world went up in a mushroom cloud over a cartoon -- or because of a photograph of some reveler dressed up like a pig? Well, of course, that would be absurd, a comedy, a Clouseauean flick about a bumbling inspector, right? No, that would be a documentary about the end of civilization circa 2006 -- unless we come to our senses. The cartoon implosion now rocking the Muslim world --...

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18 February 2006

Cartoon row reveals gulf of cultural ignorance

History will tell it as a story of cartoons, a case of satire aimed at Muslims and the Prophet Mohammad. Cartoons so offensive that, four months after their publication in a Danish newspaper, they sparked off enraged protests around the Islamic world unleashing a fury of violence against the blasphemous, godless and desecrating West. Calling up the phantoms of religious wars and racial conflicts...

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18 February 2006

A media strategy

MUCH has been said and done in response to the deliberately offensive anti-Muslim cartoons published late last year by a conservative Danish newspaper, and profusely printed in many Europeans and non-European media, including South Africa, Jordan and Malaysia. While the prevalent narrative in the mainstream Western media has treacherously defended the essentially Western emphasis on freedom of...

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