The Cartoon Row

3 February 2006

European Muslims mix anger, conciliation at prayers

COPENHAGEN, Feb 3 (Reuters) - European Muslims, some bearing aloft banners threatening a "9/11" for Europe, ratcheted up their anger on Friday over controversial cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammad, despite some imams calling for calm. After holy day prayers at a mosque in central London, a group of 300 Muslim demonstrators marched to the Danish embassy to vent their anger, holding placards...

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3 February 2006

European elite scrambles to defuse furore over caricatures

By Kim Willsher in Paris, Luke Harding in Berlin and Nicholas Watt in Brussels Europe's political elite were scrambling last night to contain the furore across the Arab world at the publication of caricatures of Muhammad, with leaders stressing that freedom of the press did not mean freedom to cause offence. With newspaper editors in half a dozen countries unrepentant at the decision to republish...

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3 February 2006

Prophetic fallacy

In September 2005, a Danish newspaper published 10 cartoons, including one depicting the prophet Muhammad with a bomb on his turban. There were immediate protests within Denmark and the situation has recently escalated to the point where Danish goods are being boycotted, Scandinavian aid workers have been pulled out of Gaza and ambassadors have been recalled. One striking feature of these events...

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3 February 2006

The freedom that hurts us

The battle is set, of religious extremism versus freedom of speech. These are the lines drawn, or so we are told, in the escalating tensions worldwide surrounding the printing of images of Muhammad in Denmark and elsewhere in Europe. Although the media is only now picking up on this story, my inbox has been receiving messages about these cartoons for weeks. The messages range from high-pitched to...

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3 February 2006

Friday prayers fuel further Muslim protest against cartoons

Friday prayers in the Muslim world helped fuel further outrage against the caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed published in Europe, at the same time that the controversy promised to continue as more and more European publications were re-printing the cartoons. As the controversy widened, what began to crystallize Friday was a clash-of-civilizations collision between Western views of freedom of...

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3 February 2006

British Muslims protest over cartoons

Hundreds of British Muslims today gathered outside the Danish embassy in London to vent their anger over Danish cartoons depicting the prophet Muhammad. Protesters held placards bearing slogans including "behead the one who insults the prophet" and "free speech go to hell". Demonstrators met outside the Regent's Park mosque, in central London, after Friday prayers before marching to the embassy on...

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3 February 2006

PM takes message to the masses

Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen took to the airwaves on Thursday to directly address Muslims in an attempt to ease the tense situation arising from daily newspaper Jyllands-Posten's Mohammed caricatures. In an exclusive interview with Arabic satellite television station Al Arabiya, Rasmussen repeated that the nation's media was independent and that even the country's prime minister was not...

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3 February 2006

Danish PM to meet ambassadors in bid to defuse cartoons row

Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen was to meet foreign ambassadors today to brief them on the government’s position on the furore over a Danish newspaper’s publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad. It was unclear which countries’ diplomats would attend the meeting, which also is to include Foreign Minister Per Stig Moeller. Fogh Rasmussen and Moeller were to detail the government’s...

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3 February 2006

Italian newspapers print caricatures of Prophet Muhammad

Two right-wing Italian newspapers on Friday published the 12 caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad that have sparked outrage across the Muslim world, and printed editorials criticizing European media for giving in to pressure over the drawings. The drawings appeared on the front pages of the Libero daily under the headline "Muhammad rules here." La Padania newspaper, the mouthpiece of the Northern...

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3 February 2006

Muslims in West react to Muhammad cartoons

The publication of cartoon caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad in Western papers has sparked government protests and street demonstrations in several countries across the Muslim world. But Muslims in Europe and the United States have been less publicly outspoken. One reason may be that Muslim community leaders in many Western countries -- though they are unhappy with the depictions of the Prophet...

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