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Those Mohammed cartoon protests just wont stop

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psycho_snake said:
I dont blame us muslims for wanting an apology, but certainly not the way that muslims have bveen going on about it. im ashamed to say that ima muslim when I see people act like that because its so fucking stupid. We could just talk about it normally and sort out this problem like humans, but instead we have a bunch of retards who think that fighting is the best way to solve the problem.

I was sick to my stomach when I sw those pictures. I had to change the channel because I felt so sorry and disgusted after is aw what they did. It just goes to show that all america cared about was the oil, because the way that the soldiers have been acting just shows that they dont give a shit about iraq their people. They've been through so much shit during the Saddam era and now these American soldiers are humilating and hurting them in the same way. Its ironic that saddam is actually living in better conditions than the Iraqi people.


I know you are a pretty reasonable person, especially since I see you bitch about all the censorship your country subjects you to, so I would hope you understand the impetus behinds the creation of the cartoons.

That being said the cases of abuse in Iraq have been taken quite seriously by the American public. Hell a lot of the American public very vocally protested the idea of going to Iraq in the first place. I still feel it was a huge error and very unfair to the Iraqi people. Unfortunately due to OUR misjudgements we have come into conflict with a large segment of the Iraqi public. The fact that some soldiers do not treat the people who day in, day out want to kill and are actively trying and aiding attempts is not surprising. In fact I would say the soldiers actions while brutal are what I would expect. The blame squarely lies on the people who led us into Iraq and set us up in this position ie Bushco and the military higher ups. I hope they will be held accountable by history, but it is just a hope.
 
Zaptruder said:
Seriously though. What is there to debate about?

What is there to debate about that doesn't ultimately come down to issues where faith subverts evidence and logic?

Herein lies the problem. As you've said, evidence and logic are not required by a faith that looks into itself for verification of it's existance. Most have been taught all of their lives to follow their faith without question just like we have been tought all of our lives that freedom of speech is an automatic right. (yes I'm just restating the obvious hehhhe) These types of conflicts will never go away unless we find some kind of common ground since we will never give up our rights to free speech, and they will never stop protecting their prophet from disrespect.
 
You know its funny, cause according to the Quran Muslims should not differentiate between the prophets or messengers. So why don't they get so riled up when Jesus is portrayed as a hippie or has an appearence on South Park? O wait.. I forgot, the Quran is only used for chanting these days.
 
RiZ III said:
You know its funny, cause according to the Quran Muslims should not differentiate between the prophets or messengers. So why don't they get so riled up when Jesus is portrayed as a hippie or has an appearence on South Park? O wait.. I forgot, the Quran is only used for chanting these days.

I can think of 3 reasons:

1. Not all prophets are created equal and Mohammed is clearly on a higher pedestal with Muslims, as he is the last prophet who got the final word from God, undistorted unlike the Torah and Bible (or so they claim). Their daily prayers emphasize the central role of Mohammed. Jesus is also more important than any other figure in Christianity.

2. Furthermore, Muslims identify with Mohammed more because they are the only one worshipping/paying respect to him among the big 3 monotheist religions. Mohammed and his divine revelation is what set Muslims apart. Mohammed being from Arabia certainly helps feeling a connection with him among Arabs in particular.

3. And one can not deny a hostile, islamophobic undercurrent in the West and in that light, the publication of those cartoons was clearly intended as a provocation in some circles masquerading as free speech. You can not entirely blame Muslims for perceiving as only as such just like the West tends to see all Muslims as irrational, backward and apologists of violence (many of the Danish cartoons used those very same stereotypes).
 
How were they not all "created equal"?

" And the believers, all who believe in God, and His angles, and His scriptures, and His messengers; we do not differentiate between any of His messengers" 2:285

"Mohammed is but a messenger of whom many messengers have passed before him" 3:144

"Those who rejected God and His messengers, and they want to make a distinction between God and His messengers, and they say: “We believe in some and reject some!”, and they desire to take a path in-between. " 4:150

..and the list goes on. Its true that the Muslims put Muhammad on their holy pedastal, but it certainly isn't justified by the Quran.


And why shouldn't they print these cartoons? Did the Muslims have protests when the children were killed in Beslan? Or when the towers came crashing down? Did they protest Osama using their religion to incite violence? Do they protest the countless disgusting hadith their own preachers preach? No they didn't. So let them parade around creating havok in their own countries.
 
Well, there's always been a clear dichotomy between a literal interprepation of holy scriptures and how a religion is actually practiced by most. The older the religion, the more apparent this is.

I don't think the situation is as clear-cut as you make it out to be. Muslims clearly have their taboos concerning Mahommed, there's no denying that. But I see the cartoons as more of a catalyst for a series of grievances and frustrations Muslims have against the West. Are some of the angry sentiments exploited by extremists and states in the region? Yeah, it appears so, but I also see the anger of ordinary Muslims who genuinely don't like having the prophet mocked and take it seriously, regardless of a tradition of satire and secularism in the West.

The issue of printing those cartoons is basically the same catch-22 the original Danish cartoonists were faced with when they were offered the assignment. In a climate of extreme tensions between the Muslim world and the West, doing those cartoons is like kicking the hornet's nest. Either out of feat or out of pragmatism, one might choose not to needlessly increase tensions just to show some zeal for the value of free speech. The latter is the choice the vast majority of news channels and newspapers chose in the West.
 
Instigator said:
Well, there's always been a clear dichotomy between a literal interprepation of holy scriptures and how a religion is actually practiced by most. The older the religion, the more apparent this is.

I don't think the situation is as clear-cut as you make it out to be. Muslims clearly have their taboos concerning Mahommed, there's no denying that. But I see the cartoons as more of a catalyst for a series of grievances and frustrations Muslims have against the West. Are some of the angry sentiments exploited by extremists and states in the region? Yeah, it appears so, but I also see the anger of ordinary Muslims who genuinely don't like having the prophet mocked and take it seriously, regardless of a tradition of satire and secularism in the West.

The issue of printing those cartoons is basically the same catch-22 the original Danish cartoonists were faced with when they were offered the assignment. In a climate of extreme tensions between the Muslim world and the West, doing those cartoons is like kicking the hornet's nest. Either out of feat or out of pragmatism, one might choose not to needlessly increase tensions just to show some zeal for the value of free speech. The latter is the choice the vast majority of news channels and newspapers chose in the West.


Spot on Instigator
 
Instigator said:
The issue of printing those cartoons is basically the same catch-22 the original Danish cartoonists were faced with when they were offered the assignment. In a climate of extreme tensions between the Muslim world and the West, doing those cartoons is like kicking the hornet's nest. Either out of feat or out of pragmatism, one might choose not to needlessly increase tensions just to show some zeal for the value of free speech. The latter is the choice the vast majority of news channels and newspapers chose in the West.

Or, to put it into plain writing. The JP editors are tools. At least, I think they are. They almost make me wish there were laws that allowed suing for stupidity, shortsightedness and general lack of insight. Not to mention for putting an entire population in harm's way.
 
It looks like some clerics are putting a bounty on the cartoonists heads.
PESHAWAR, Pakistan - A Pakistani cleric on Friday announced a $1 million bounty for killing a cartoonist who drew Prophet Muhammad, as thousands joined street rallies across the country and authorities arrested scores of protesters.

Police put another Islamist leader under house detention amid fears that the demonstrations held after Friday prayers would turn violent, after riots this week killed five people, but most protests passed off peacefully.

Denmark announced it had temporarily closed its embassy in Pakistan after a week of riots in which Western businesses were targeted. The country also advised against all travel to Pakistan and urged Danes still in the country to leave.

Denmark has already temporarily closed its embassies in Lebanon, Syria, Iran and Indonesia after anti-Danish protests and threats against staff.

Meanwhile, Pakistan recalled its ambassador to Denmark for "consultations" about the cartoons, Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam said.

Fearing more riots, Pakistan deployed thousands of security forces in major cities as crowds took to the streets. About 7,000 staged a protest at Rawalpindi, 5,000 in the southwestern city of Quetta and about 5,000 in the southern city of Karachi.

Police arrested 125 protesters in the eastern city of Multan for violating a ban on rallies in Punjab province, and detained 70 others in Karachi.

In the northwestern city of Peshawar, where riots left two dead and scores injured on Wednesday, prayer leader Mohammed Yousaf Qureshi announced the bounty for killing a cartoonist to about 1,000 people outside the Mohabat Khan mosque, where worshippers burned a flag of Denmark and an effigy of the Danish prime minister.

He said the mosque and his religious school would give $25,000 and a car, while a local jewelers' association would give another $1 million
. No representative of the association was available to confirm it had made the offer.

"This is a unanimous decision of by all imams (prayer leaders) of Islam that whoever insults the prophet deserves to be killed and whoever will take this insulting man to his end, will get this prize," Qureshi said.

Qureshi did not name any cartoonist in his announcement. He did not appear aware that 12 different people had drawn the pictures — considered blasphemous by Muslims.

A Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, first printed the prophet pictures by 12 cartoonists in September. The newspaper has since apologized to Muslims for the cartoons, one of them showing Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban with an ignited fuse. Other Western newspapers, mostly in Europe, have reprinted the pictures, asserting their news value and the right to freedom of expression.

Police in Punjab province were ordered to restrict the movement of all religious leaders who might address rallies and to round up religious activists "who could be any threat to law and order," a senior police official said in the provincial capital Lahore.

Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, chief of the radical group Jamaat al-Dawat, became the first religious leader detained by authorities since protests began in Pakistan early this month. He was due to make a speech in Faisalabad, about 75 miles away.

Intelligence officials have said scores of members of Jamaat al-Dawat and assorted militant groups joined protests in Lahore on Tuesday and had incited violence in a bid to undermine President Gen. Pervez Musharraf's government.

In Peshawar, police fired tear gas to disperse more than 1,000 people and arrested several people, said a witness, Khizar Hayat. Four effigies representing Danish, German, French and Norwegian leaders were hanged from lampposts.

In Islamabad, visiting former U.S. President Bill Clinton criticized the cartoons but said Muslims wasted an opportunity to build better ties with the West by holding violent protests.

"I can tell you most people in the United States deeply respect Islam ... and most people in Europe do,"
he said. Clinton was visiting to sign an agreement with Pakistan's government on an HIV-AIDS project by his charitable foundation.

Clerics at mosques across Pakistan still condemned the cartoons at prayers marking the Muslim sabbath on Friday.

"Give enough power to the Muslim countries and enable them to take revenge," said Qari Saeed Ullah, a prayer leader in Islamabad.
 
those poor fuckers better be in hiding.

i've had enough of islam. we can turn the other cheek and only give lip-service to 9/11, London, Madrid, Bali, etc., but if you draw a cartoon you deserve to die. Fuck these muslims and anyone who wishes death on the cartoonists.

i'm so sick of playing with one arm tied behind our back. we're clearly at war with people here, and it's time to fucking act like it.
 
whytemyke said:
i'm so sick of playing with one arm tied behind our back. we're clearly at war with people here, and it's time to fucking act like it.

Good luck getting anyone to act proactively on the matter.
 
Instigator said:
I see whytemyke wants to run a concentration camp or be in charge of a purification squad.
Would you prefer to coddle these people who want us dead?

edit: because I know that most of GAF only argues what they want to see in a thread instead of what actually is in one... if you read my post you'll see I'm obviously referring to the people calling for the murder of the cartoonist.
 
Instigator said:
The issue of printing those cartoons is basically the same catch-22 the original Danish cartoonists were faced with when they were offered the assignment. In a climate of extreme tensions between the Muslim world and the West, doing those cartoons is like kicking the hornet's nest. Either out of feat or out of pragmatism, one might choose not to needlessly increase tensions just to show some zeal for the value of free speech. The latter is the choice the vast majority of news channels and newspapers chose in the West.

So basically no one should ever be allowed to satirize Islam or (what they perceive to be) Islam's failings, lest they be subjected to violence and the threat of violence? I don't buy it.
 
Cloak said:
So basically no one should ever be allowed to satirize Islam or (what they perceive to be) Islam's failings, lest they be subjected to violence and the threat of violence? I don't buy it.
Oh they should be allowed alright. The question is just whether it's a good idea to actually act on the right at this point in time. I don't think it was. It was suitable for internal debate in Denmark, perhaps, but definitely not suitable for worldwide scrutiny and inevitable misinterpretation.
 
Instigator said:
I see whytemyke wants to run a concentration camp or be in charge of a purification squad.

Well that's certainly what a lot of these fanatical Muslims want to do in the West anyway.
 
I saw pictures from new protests in Pakistan today. Banners promising "World War 3" to the west and such. Are these people really oblivious to the fact that if it came to the extremes they seem to be so anxious to get to, they would all become very, very quiet in a very short time? Or is it just that they figure the west will keep 'one hand tied behind the back' no matter what happens?
 
callous said:
I saw pictures from new protests in Pakistan today. Banners promising "World War 3" to the west and such. Are these people really oblivious to the fact that if it came to the extremes they seem to be so anxious to get to, they would all become very, very quiet in a very short time? Or is it just that they figure the west will keep 'one hand tied behind the back' no matter what happens?

Maybe they believe they'll win in a war with the West because God is on their side or some shit like that. If the world degenerates into another world war (over cartoon's no less) then Humanity is taking a major step backwards... I worry for the world.
 
Or, to put it into plain writing. The JP editors are tools. At least, I think they are. They almost make me wish there were laws that allowed suing for stupidity, shortsightedness and general lack of insight. Not to mention for putting an entire population in harm's way.

Don't shift the blame to the publishers. Everything happening because of these cartoons are the extremists fault. Maybe something like this needed to be done to show the true colors of many Muslims.
 
Cooter said:
Don't shift the blame to the publishers. Everything happening because of these cartoons are the extremists fault. Maybe something like this needed to be done to show the true colors of many Muslims.

Moronic.

The publishers in Denmark were well aware they were venturing into dangerous territory. Not just because the west is in conflict with the Muslim world, but because first and foremost because of an uneasy relations between the Muslim minority already living in Denmark as with many European states with immigrant populations.

Muslim extremists are surely using this as a rallying cry for war, but I can guarantee you the vast majority of ordinary Muslims didn't find the cartoons funny either. The publishers lit the match and the fire got out of control.
 
callous said:
Oh they should be allowed alright. The question is just whether it's a good idea to actually act on the right at this point in time.

This begs the question of when a "good time" to do so would be...

Instigator said:
The publishers in Denmark were well aware they were venturing into dangerous territory. Not just because the west is in conflict with the Muslim world, but because first and foremost because of an uneasy relations between the Muslim minority already living in Denmark as with many European states with immigrant populations.

So artists and poltical commentators should have to wait until all is well between Islam and "the west" before they satirize or criticize Islam? They're gonna be waiting a mighty long time, then...


Think about what you're saying.
 
whytemyke said:
those poor fuckers better be in hiding.

i've had enough of islam. we can turn the other cheek and only give lip-service to 9/11, London, Madrid, Bali, etc., but if you draw a cartoon you deserve to die. Fuck these muslims and anyone who wishes death on the cartoonists.

i'm so sick of playing with one arm tied behind our back. we're clearly at war with people here, and it's time to fucking act like it.


I feel your frustration dude.
 
Moronic.

The publishers in Denmark were well aware they were venturing into dangerous territory. Not just because the west is in conflict with the Muslim world, but because first and foremost because of an uneasy relations between the Muslim minority already living in Denmark as with many European states with immigrant populations.

Muslim extremists are surely using this as a rallying cry for war, but I can guarantee you the vast majority of ordinary Muslims didn't find the cartoons funny either. The publishers lit the match and the fire got out of control.

Hardly.

If dangerous territory is publishing an offensive cartoon then maybe it’s time the west sees the irrational hatred being spewed by these people. A woman might know that a short dress will increase her chances of being raped but if she does get rapped you still can't put the blame on her.

I don't think anybody here insisted that ordinary Muslims found the cartoons funny. That's not the point. How about civility and perspective? How about leaving the west and it's customs and cultures alone and stop trying to impose Muslim ideals on the west. We have no interest for them and especially have no desire to be lectured. These people are immigrants. You move to a foreign land to become part of the culture and customs. Don’t move to another country and get upset because something offends you when the same thing was happening before you arrived.
 
Publishing your ideas is never moronic. Why should the Danes modify their core political values to conform to the sensibilities of an immigrant population? Why are the immigrants in Denmark in the first place, is it because their native countries offered them fewer opportunities? Could those less-than-ideal conditions be a result of policies that prevent the free exchange of ideas? Is there any way to allow "a little" censorship, only where it's "warranted" by hurt feelings?
 
Cloak said:
This begs the question of when a "good time" to do so would be...
I'm guessing around 50-100 years. Give or take. I completely see your point, make no mistake.

God this situation is complex. I want the 80s to come back.
 
Guileless said:
Publishing your ideas is never moronic. Why should the Danes modify their core political values to conform to the sensibilities of an immigrant population? Why are the immigrants in Denmark in the first place, is it because their native countries offered them fewer opportunities? Could those less-than-ideal conditions be a result of policies that prevent the free exchange of ideas? Is there any way to allow "a little" censorship, only where it's "warranted" by hurt feelings?

Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.
 
Slurpy said:
Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.


Their core political values include allowing someone to say whatever they want, even if that might offend another person/group, regardless of the goal. Their core political and social values are such that society is meant to be an open place for expression of any idea without fear of violence or repression.
 
Slurpy said:
Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.
That's just stupid. I don't agree with the publishing of the cartoons, but that doesn't stop me from recognising that the goal was far from what you describe. It was to spur a debate on freedom of expression following the evidence that a large number of Danish artists, comedians and writers had explicitly said they censored themselves out of fear.
 
Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.

Why is it ok to mock every living group on this planet but Muslims?

It's a cartoon. Relax. Sticks and stones may break my bones but words and cartoons can never hurt me.

Ok then?
 
Slurpy said:
Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.

Their core political values consist of allowing anyone to voice their opinion in a nonviolent, non-threatening manner, e.g. drawing a cartoon in a newspaper. Content-based regulation of speech by the government is abhorrent to Western political values. Insult is subjective and beyond the scope of government to regulate. Why am I even saying this, isn't it common knowledge?
 
I dont blame us muslims for wanting an apology, but certainly not the way that muslims have bveen going on about it. im ashamed to say that ima muslim when I see people act like that because its so fucking stupid. We could just talk about it normally and sort out this problem like humans, but instead we have a bunch of retards who think that fighting is the best way to solve the problem.

They want an apology? What kind of apology is this that they want? They do realise that apology's have been made! The UN requested that muslims accept these apology's! The extremist muslims then proceeded to demonstrate even more violent protests in which people have died! In this request for more apologies they have also threatened the lives of people in most of the western world (like this is new :-/), the very people who protested against such events in Iraq and believe that the cartoons are wrong have had there lives threatened! How is this logical? DEATH TO BRITAIN! Why? What did britain do? What did I as a Londoner to be procise do? Is everyone in the western world expected to end there life in shame of those who would be willing to create such cartoons and in the honour of Mohameds name? Should I go outside and write an apology to the world with my own blood? Would that help maybe? No, it wouldn't... Why? Because this all comes down to a hatred to the western world which many muslims have wanted to vent and have now come up with an irrational reason to do so with! They now see that they can get away with such threats because it's in the name of there religion and they are shocked and appauled with the actions of these newspapers (which obviously then means the government which obviously has complete control of the newspapers and then the citizens who fully support said government and obviously newspaper.) Obviously muslims will not like the cartoons, but, what do the cartoons have to do with the citizens and governments of the western world as a whole? Why should everyone need to bow down to these Islamic beliefs out of fear? Why are we being covered in a veil of terror to such an extreme that we should feal the need to supress some of our basic human rights such as freedom of speach?


The next question is how now many muslims can be protesting the coming of Islamiphobia as if it's not to be expected? One day I go walking down the streats of London, "Oh what's that I?" I say as I see a massive congregation of people chanting..... I walk over to investigate further, but, as I get closer the chants become clearer, suddenly I notice one of the signs being held high and proudly above one persons head "Death to....." well me actually.......... Now how am I not meant to fear those who want me dead in atleast some way? Obviously with the terrorist attacks in London I went along as normal, there wasn't exactly muslim people running through the streats chearing the attacks no infact the opposite, muslims expressed there deap regret for the attacks... Now however I see not just 1, 2 or 6 people wanting me dead, but a whole crowed of people essentially chearing for someone to come along and slice off my head in the middle of the streat........ How am I in some way not meant to worry about how close another possible attack is? Obviously I know the vast majority of muslim people don't want me dead.... Infact specifically me dead, I doubt there is more then one (don't ask.) But the fear is still there in some way... It's not something that you can just ignore really and it's not the fault of the majority.... It's just something that you can't really expect people not to have....... You can't go into the streats and protest the onset of islamiphobia when this is what people are seeing.. :-/

Basically what I am saying is that a lot of work needs to be done..... Understanding needs to be broadened and whilst the majority in the west (talking about muslims and others alike) are doing this, and live together peacefully without threatening each others lives everyone else seems to be completely against this..... Stick to what they know and don't leave these confined areas of knowledge...... It's these people that I'm worried about.... And I'm pretty sure it's the same for most people...

Anyway, I've ranted long enough...... Not really sure (as usual) if people will understand what I said, but, that's my 2p on the matter. :)

Ronok


Edited something cause it seemed like a personal attack on the op of that quote..... Ermmm sorry. ^^;; What I said might not seem to make as much sence anymore though. Hmmmm..... I didn't mean it to be an attack anyway. :) (Dunno if anyone even noticed.)
 
Slurpy said:
Their 'core political values' consist of insulting and vilifying an entire religion, and publishing pointless images whose only goal is to incite hatred and violence?

Ok then.

Define what would constitute acceptable satirizing of Islam, or what people perceive to be Islam's failings. Or would any such action be viewed as "inciting hatred and violence"? Funny how every other religion has been satirized and insulted, but only when it comes to Islam are we supposed to modify our core political values for the sake of appeasement. Please.
 
Cooter said:
It's a cartoon. Relax. Sticks and stones may break my bones but words and cartoons can never hurt me.
unless, of course, said sticks and stones are aimed at muhammed. in which case they can blow you up.

this is such an incredibly complicated situation, and I feel bad for moderate muslims in the middle east who are being swept up into this shit where it's either "want people dead", or have your neighbor villify you as much as these people who did it.

clearly, however, I'm not willing to allow the sensitivities of a people a half a world away indicate what I say, nor will I let people of a different culture dictate what I do with what I believe is right. And, I hate to say it, but I will strike down the hand that tries to take from me my rights like freedom of speech, be it foreign or domestic. and I hope to God that Bush still at least believes in THAT ideal.
 
Guileless said:
Why am I even saying this, isn't it common knowledge?

No.

And I'm tired of people saying that the cartoons didn't have a point of view and were only created to incite (insert what they were trying to incite here) and to be offensive for the sake of being offensive. One of the messages in these cartoons was that of self censorship on the topic of Islam, created in part by violence or threats of violence on those who would speak out. In addition, many of the cartoons spoke out on the connection between Islam and violence. The medium of a one panel cartoonist is rather crude, so the resulting cartoons will not be subtle, and will also be somewhat ambiguous.

However you can not deny that there is a connection between Islam and violence if you've seen at least one video of men yelling "Allah Akbar" as they chop off an innocent man‘s head. Or if you have the knowledge that men have killed themselves along with as many innocents in order to be in paradise with 72 virgins (or raisins). Or if he know that teachers have been brutally murdered in southern Thailand because they teach in secular schools. Or if you watched planes fly into the World Trade Centre, or watch the Madrid trains explode, see the casualties photos from the London underground bombings etc. etc.
 
Protests still going strong. Now in Lybia:
Nine Die in Cartoon Protests in Libya By RIAZ KHAN, Associated Press Writer
33 minutes ago

PESHAWAR, Pakistan - A Pakistani cleric announced a $1 million bounty for killing a cartoonist who drew the Prophet Muhammad. In Libya, a demonstration against the caricatures left the Italian consulate on fire and at least nine people dead, according to an Italian diplomat.

Denmark, where a newspaper first published the cartoons, temporarily closed its embassy in Pakistan and advised its citizens to leave the country.

An Italian consular official, Antonio Simoes-Concalves, said nine protesters had been killed in the demonstration in the Libyan city of Bengazi as armed police fired bullets and tear gas on a crowd of more than 1,000 demonstrators.

Libyan security officials said 11 people had been killed or wounded, but gave no breakdown.

"They are still continually firing," Simoes-Concalves said late Friday, speaking by telephone from inside the consulate where he was holed up. "They haven't managed to block them."

The Italian Foreign Ministry confirmed that the first floor of the consulate had been set on fire after the crowd charged into the grounds late Friday.

Libyan state television showed firefighters trying to put out the fire, ambulances taking casualties away from the scene and five cars that were severely damaged in the riot.

Security officials said the demonstrators hurled stones and bottles at the consulate, and later entered the grounds and set fire to the building and a consular car.

Police fired shots to try to disperse the crowd, the officials said, speaking on condition of anonymity as they were not authorized to speak to the press.

No Italians were injured, the Italian Foreign Ministry said.

In Pakistan, Mohammed Yousaf Qureshi announced the bounty for killing a cartoonist to about 1,000 people outside the historic Mohabat Khan mosque in the northwestern city of Peshawar.

He said the mosque and the religious school he leads would give a $25,000 reward and a car for killing the cartoonist who drew the caricatures — considered blasphemous by Muslims. He said a local jewelers' association would also give $1 million, but no representative of the association was available to confirm the offer.

"Whoever has done this despicable and shameful act, he has challenged the honor of Muslims. Whoever will kill this cursed man, he will get $1 million dollars from the association of the jewelers bazaar, one million rupees ($16,700) from Masjid Mohabat Khan and 500,000 rupees ($8,350) and a car from Jamia Ashrafia as a reward," Qureshi said.

"This is a unanimous decision of by all imams of Islam that whoever insults the prophets deserves to be killed and whoever will take this insulting man to his end, will get this prize," he said.

Qureshi did not name any cartoonist in his announcement and he did not appear aware that 12 different people had drawn the pictures.

A Danish newspaper, Jyllands-Posten, first printed the prophet pictures in September. The newspaper has since apologized to Muslims for the cartoons, one of which shows Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban. Other Western newspapers, mostly in Europe, have reprinted the pictures, asserting their news value and the right to freedom of expression.

In Denmark, a spokesman for the Jyllands-Posten declined comment on the bounty offer. But Mogens Blicher Bjerregaard, president of the Danish Journalist Union and spokesman for the cartoonists, condemned it.

"It is totally absurd what is happening. The cartoonists just did their job and they did nothing illegal," he said.

He said the cartoonists — who have been living under police protection since last year — are aware of the reward and are "feeling bad about the whole situation." He did not say whether their security had been stepped up.
 
Ark-AMN said:
Protests still going strong. Now in Lybia:
It still astonishes me how a so called man of god can at one moment condemn a cartoon, and in the same sentence offer up a reward to have a human being murdered. Drawing a cartoon is thus far worse than ordering out a hit! In fact the murder is morally good. When I was younger I was an atheist who nevertheless still looked at religion as a positive thing, or at least a neutral thing. Over the last few years I've changed my mind.
 
posted earlier by me in abu ghraib thread, hope it contributes to the debate

"Filmmaker Nigel Wingrove in 1989 shot a film named , "Visions of Ecstasy," a quasi-soft porn movie about the visions of St. Theresa of Avalon an erotic response to crucifixion. The British Board of Film Classification refused to give it a certificate. They couldn't brand it "pornographic" or prove that its content was blasphemous, but they presumed viewers would perceive it as such and blocked its distribution. Mr. Wingrove believed that his right of expression was violated and took the case to the European Court of Human Rights. In 1996, the court ruled against him.

In one of its most notorious decisions, Otto Preminger Institut v. Austria, the European Court of Human Rights decided that depictions of religion that are "gratuitously offensive" to believers infringe upon their rights and "do not contribute to any form of public debate capable of furthering progress in human affairs." It also said that securing religious pluralism was essential to any successful democratic society. "

so filmmakers, journalist, media members do not have right to release material that is "gratuitously offensive" to fundemental christian/western values because that kind material "do not contribute to any form of public debate capable of furthering progress in human affairs" but those cartoons published in that danish newspaper somehow do?
 
<nu>faust, the fact that there is British common law against blasphemous libel is very unfortunate, and should be repealed. I also disagree with the European Court of Human Rights ruling, and their reasoning behind the ruling. Being offensive doesn't infringe on anyone's rights, and whether the work contributes to debate or human affairs is rather irrelevant. This is not a standard all works must face.

You seem to be suggesting there is some sort of double standard here. However since the cartoons were not created in England, and a case regarding the cartoons has of yet not been brought to the European human rights board, I don't see how you can sincerely imply this. Especially since a semi pornographic scene with Jesus on the cross and a cartoon with Mohamed with a little fuse are not equivalent.
 
Ronok, I thoroughly enjoyed your rant. Thanks :)

No problem, I just kinda had to get that off my chest to someone other then my girlfriend who's probably getting bored of my rants about it by now. o.o
 
malek4980 said:
<nu>faust, the fact that there is British common law against blasphemous libel is very unfortunate, and should be repealed. I also disagree with the European Court of Human Rights ruling, and their reasoning behind the ruling. Being offensive doesn't infringe on anyone's rights, and whether the work contributes to debate or human affairs is rather irrelevant. This is not a standard all works must face.

You seem to be suggesting there is some sort of double standard here. However since the cartoons were not created in England, and a case regarding the cartoons has of yet not been brought to the European human rights board, I don't see how you can sincerely imply this. Especially since a semi pornographic scene with Jesus on the cross and a cartoon with Mohamed with a little fuse are not equivalent.

I thought that was rejected and replaced with the glorification of terrorism law just recently, it might have just been the BBFC being overly zealous when it comes to censoring.
 
Phranky said:
I thought that was rejected and replaced with the glorification of terrorism law just recently, it might have just been the BBFC being overly zealous when it comes to censoring.
No there's an old law on the books that apply only to attacks on the Christian religion. European Court of Human Rights says blasphemy laws are the choice of the individual countries to decide.
 
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