Author Topic: Face of Muhammed  (Read 2222 times)

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Offline Anonymous

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Face of Muhammed
« on: February 05, 2006, 12:16:00 PM »
From http://face-of-muhammed.blogspot.com/

Please leave

Dear muslims,

If you do not like my country, please leave.
If you do not like the way our women dress, please leave.
If you do not like our separation of politics and religion, please leave.
If you support violent responses to criticism of Islam, please leave.
If you support terrorism in any way, shape or form, please leave.
If you cannot accept satirical cartoons in our newspapers, please leave.
If you do not support democracy or the freedom of speech, please leave my country.

::armed:: [ This Message was edited by: Eudora on 2006-02-05 14:48 ]
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #1 on: February 05, 2006, 12:31:00 PM »
Islamic Group Posts Anti-Jewish Cartoons

Associated Press
Published: Sunday, February 05, 2006

AMSTERDAM -- A Belgian-Dutch Islamic political organization has posted anti-Jewish cartoons on its website.

It's in response to the cartoons of the prophet Mohammed that appeared in Danish papers, triggering violent demonstrations by Muslims.

The cartoons are posted on the Arab European League's site.

The site carries a disclaimer saying the images are being shown as part of an exercise in free speech rather than to endorse their content -- just as European newspapers have reprinted the Danish cartoons.

One of the AEL cartoons is of famed Dutch Holocaust victim Anne Frank in bed with Adolf Hitler.

Another questions whether the Holocaust actually occurred.

from: http://www.canada.com/vancouversun/news ... a9&k=40728

 ::unhappy::
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #2 on: February 05, 2006, 12:35:00 PM »
http://www.arabeuropean.org/newsdetail. ... e74ea214d9

AEL will launch Cartoon campaign
 
03 feburary, 2006 ; Posted 11 : 4 PM

After the lectures that Arabs and Muslims received from Europeans on Freedom of Speech and on Tolerance. And after that many   European newspapers republished the Danish cartoons on the Prophet Mohammed. AEL decided to enter the cartoon business and to use our right to artistic expression.

Just like the newspapers in Europe claim that they only want to defend the freedom of speech and do not desire to stigmatise Muslims,we also do stress that our cartoons are not meant as an offence to anybody and ought not to be taken as a statement against any group, community or historical fact.

If it is the time to break Taboos and cross all the red lines, we certainly do not want to stay behind.



they certainly arent pulling any punches




http://www.arabeuropean.org/article.php?ID=100
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Offline Antigen

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« Reply #3 on: February 05, 2006, 11:57:00 PM »
Good! I heard a very impressibe Islamic intelectual on NPR take to task both the European press' aparent intent to incite and the hard-line Islamic response. Whoever decided to respond w/ counter propaganda, they either have satire and political comentary in perspective already and are demonstrating for their own philisophical brethren, or they'll soon find out how this shit works.

Nobody's going to drop bombs or kill anybody over anti Isreali/American cartoons, will they? Come on! We're far too civilized for that, aren't we?

Or maybe they're talking to us and they've got a point.

Government operates best when it allows all messengers to offer their views, allowing the American people to decide which take root and which wither away.
--Harold Furchtgott-Roth, member of the Federal Communications Commission



_________________
fka ~ Antigen
Drug war POW  
Straight, Sarasota
`80 - `82
Why I Live at the PO[ This Message was edited by: Eudora on 2006-02-05 20:59 ]
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"Don\'t let the past remind us of what we are not now."
~ Crosby Stills Nash & Young, Sweet Judy Blue Eyes

Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #4 on: February 06, 2006, 09:42:00 AM »
Four people have died as demonstrations against cartoons satirising the Prophet Muhammad intensify.

Three people were killed when police in Afghanistan fired on protesters after a police station came under attack, a government spokesman said.

In Somalia, a 14-year-old boy was shot dead and several others were injured after protesters attacked the police.

Demonstrations have also been taking place in India, Thailand, Indonesia, Iran and Gaza.

They followed attacks on Danish embassies in Syria and Lebanon over the weekend. The cartoons were first published in a Danish newspaper.

Monday's deaths were thought to be the first, but officials in Lebanon have now confirmed that a demonstrator died on Sunday after jumping from the third floor of the Danish embassy in Beirut to escape a fire.

Nationwide rallies

Hundreds of people took part in the morning demonstration in Afghanistan's Laghman province, in a second day of protests in the city.

The province's director of information, Hamraz Ningarhari, told the BBC that a policeman and a number of other people were injured.

Demonstrators shouted "death to Denmark" and "death to France", and called for diplomats and soldiers from both countries to be kicked out of Afghanistan.

Both France and Denmark sent troops to Afghanistan as part of international efforts in the US-led "war on terror".

"They want to test our feelings," protester Mawli Abdul Qahar Abu Israra told the BBC.

"They want to know whether Muslims are extremists or not. Death to them and to their newspapers," he said.

Afghan President Hamid Karzai reiterated his condemnation of the cartoons and called on western nations to take "a strong measure" to ensure such cartoons do not appear again. "It's not good for anybody," he told CNN.

Across Afghanistan, hundreds protested in Kandahar and Mazar-e-Sharif, while 200 demonstrators gathered outside the Danish embassy in the capital, Kabul.

In the north-eastern province of Takhar, demonstrators threw stones at government buildings and police fired in the air.

Protests continue

In the port city of Bosaso, in the autonomous Somali region of Puntland, police shot dead one protester and three more were injured after demonstrators threw stones and barricaded streets outside international aid agency buildings.

Peaceful protests were held in several other Somali towns.

In escalating demonstrations around the world:

* A crowd of about 200 people used stones to smash windows at the Austrian embassy in Tehran, and firecrackers and smoke bombs were set off

* In Indonesia, police fired warning shots at protesters outside the US consulate in Surabaya, the country's second largest city. Earlier, demonstrators hurled stones and broke windows at the Danish consulate in the city, and there were protests in the capital, Jakarta

* Riot police in the Indian capital, Delhi, fired tear gas and water cannons to disperse hundreds of students protesting against the cartoons

* Shops and businesses across Indian-administered Kashmir were closed after a general strike was called in protest at the drawings

* In Thailand, protesters shouted "God is great" and stamped on Denmark's flag outside the country's embassy in Bangkok, the Associated Press news agency reported

* There were protests outside the European Union offices in Gaza, following demonstrations there last week.

The cartoons first appeared in a Danish newspaper in September and caused outrage among Muslims, who consider any images of Muhammad offensive.

One of the cartoons shows Muhammad wearing a bomb-shaped turban.

Newspapers across Europe republished the pictures last week, saying they were defending freedom of expression.

CARTOON ROW
30 Sept 2005: Danish paper publishes cartoons
20 Oct: Muslim ambassadors complain to Danish PM
10 Jan 2006: Norwegian publication reprints cartoons
26 Jan: Saudi Arabia recalls its ambassador
30 Jan: Gunmen raid EU's Gaza office demanding apology
31 Jan: Danish paper apologises
1 Feb: Papers in France, Germany, Italy and Spain reprint cartoons
4 Feb: Syrians attack Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus
5 Feb: Protesters sack Danish embassy in Beirut

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/4684652.stm
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #5 on: February 06, 2006, 12:28:00 PM »
Iran's biggest-selling newspaper has waded into the Muhammad controversy by launching a competition to find the 12 "best" cartoons about the Holocaust.

Farid Mortazavi, graphics editor for Tehran's Hamshahri newspaper, said that the deliberately inflammatory contest would test out how committed Europeans were to the concept freedom of expression.

"The Western papers printed these sacrilegious cartoons on the pretext of freedom of expression, so let�s see if they mean what they say and also print these Holocaust cartoons," he said.

Karen Pollock, chief executive of the Holocaust Educational Trust, said that victims of the Holocaust and their families were growing used to insults from Iran. "It's just very sad," she told Times Online.

Iran�s regime is supportive of Holocaust revisionist historians, who maintain that the slaughter of Europe�s Jews during the Second World War was invented or exaggerated to justify the creation of Israel on Palestinian territory.

President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad courted international denunciation recently when he argued for Israel to be "wiped off the map". The President's vitriolic attacks on Israel have further soured relations with the West, already at loggerheads over the republic's nuclear research programme.

Mr Mortazavi said that tomorrow's edition of the paper would invite cartoonists to enter the competition, with gold coins as prizes for the 12 winning artists -- the same number of cartoons that appeared in the conservative Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten lighting the touchpaper for fury which has swept around the Islamic world.

Last week the Iranian Foreign Ministry invited Tony Blair to Tehran to take part in a planned conference on the Holocaust. Mr Blair said that such a conference was "shocking, ridiculous, stupid". The Prime Minister responded by inviting Mr Ahmadinejad to witness the evidence of the Holocaust in the countries of Europe.

Public protests against the publication of the cartoons have been relatively calm in Iran, although a crowd of about 200 smashed the windows of the Austrian Embassy in Tehran today.

The protesters, chanting "God is Greatest" and "Europe, Europe, shame on you", smashed all the diplomatic mission�s windows with stones and then tried to hurl petrol bombs inside.

Iran has withdrawn its ambassador to Denmark and has said it plans to review trade ties with all countries where the cartoons were published.

Mr Ahmadinejad has criticised the argument of freedom of speech employed by European newspapers to justify publication of the cartoons.

"If your newspapers are free why do not they publish anything about the innocence of the Palestinians and protest against the crimes committed by the Zionists?" the Mehr news agency quoted him as saying.

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0, ... attr=World
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #6 on: February 06, 2006, 12:29:00 PM »
Why are the arabs laying into the Jews so much with their cartoons? Aren't most Danes, and most of Europe, afterall.... Christian?  :???:
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #7 on: February 06, 2006, 12:36:00 PM »
ANKARA, Turkey ? A teenage boy shot and killed the Italian Roman Catholic priest of a church in the Black Sea port city of Trabzon on Sunday, shouting "God is great" as he escaped, according to police and witnesses.

Officers were searching for the boy aged around 14 or 15, according to a police official who declined to be identified because of rules that bar Turkish civil servants from speaking to journalists without prior authorization.

The police official would not say if the attack might be linked to the printing in European newspapers of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, which has caused anger in Muslim countries. Earlier Sunday, hundreds of Turks protested in Istanbul against the cartoons.

"Whether the killing is linked to the caricatures will emerge when the culprit has been caught," Trabzon's Gov. Huseyin Yavuzdemir said.

The priest, 60-year-old Andrea Santoro, was shot hours after Mass at Santa Maria Church.

A woman who answered the telephone at the church said the priest was inside when he was attacked, and prosecutor Burhan Cobanoglu said he was shot twice from behind, with bullets ripping through his heart and liver.

Pope Benedict XVI's envoy in Turkey, Monsignor Antonio Lucibello, said he had spoken by telephone with a witness who said she saw the attacker fleeing and "heard the young man shout 'Allah Akbar' (God is Great)."'

Lucibello declined to speculate on the motive for the killing, but said there were "no elements" to link the attack with the protests over the newspaper cartoons.

Turkey's government denounced the attack.

"We condemn with hatred the fact that the murder was committed in a house of worship against a man of religion," said Justice Minister Cemil Cicek.

http://www.foxnews.com/story/0,2933,183879,00.html
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #8 on: February 06, 2006, 03:24:00 PM »
A recently-formed Muslim group calling themselves Al Ghurabaa have called for those who �insult Muhammad� to be killed. The London-based group registered their domain only last month, and hold regular local lectures and stalls.

From an article on their website:

    The insulting of the Messenger Muhammad (saw) is something that the Muslims cannot and will not tolerate and the punishment in Islam for the one who does so is death. This is the sunnah of the prophet and the verdict of Islam upon such people, one that any Muslim is able execute.

They are protesting outside the Danish Embassy today. Picture above courtesy of New Humanist Magazine.
(Tipped from PP comments)
Monitor @ 1:49 pm

http://www.mediawatchwatch.org.uk/
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Offline try another castle

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« Reply #9 on: February 06, 2006, 06:17:00 PM »
Quote
On 2006-02-06 09:29:00, Anonymous wrote:

"Why are the arabs laying into the Jews so much with their cartoons? Aren't most Danes, and most of Europe, afterall.... Christian?  :???: "


According to these guys, the jews are behind everything. We are evil and have our fingers in every pie.

Remember, these are the same people who believed that Barbie was a jewish plot to westernize the arab world with ideas about women being sluts.

I know, Barbie is sooo semitic in appearance, so I could see how they could get confused on the matter.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #10 on: February 06, 2006, 07:08:00 PM »


 :lol:
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Offline try another castle

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« Reply #11 on: February 06, 2006, 07:17:00 PM »
OMG, that's hilarious. In context with this conversation, anyway.

Next, I want to see Ken with payos.
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #12 on: February 06, 2006, 08:16:00 PM »
Yes, aparently they converted Barbie!!

... 613 commandments huh... glad I dont have to follow that set of rules.. sheesh! payos..  :lol:
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #13 on: February 07, 2006, 10:12:00 AM »
NATO Troops Fire on Afghan Attackers



By DANIEL COONEY, Associated Press Writer 2 hours, 11 minutes ago

KABUL, Afghanistan -
NATO peacekeepers exchanged fire with protesters who attacked their base Tuesday in the second straight day of violent demonstrations in
Afghanistan over the publication of caricatures of the Prophet Muhammad, Afghan officials said. One demonstrator was killed and dozens wounded.

In neighboring Pakistan, 5,000 people chanting "Hang the man who insulted the prophet" burned effigies of one cartoonist and Denmark's prime minister. And a prominent Iranian newspaper said it was going to hold a competition for cartoons on the Holocaust in reaction to European newspapers publishing the prophet drawings.

Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, said the West's publication of the Prophet Muhammad cartoons was an Israeli conspiracy motivated by anger over the victory of the militant Hamas group in the Palestinian elections last month. "The West condemns any denial of the Jewish holocaust, but it permits the insult of Islamic sanctities," Khamenei said.

The NATO troops, most of them Norwegian, fired on hundreds of protesters outside the base in Maymana after the demonstrators shot at them and threw grenades, said provincial Gov. Mohammed Latif. The protesters also burned an armored vehicle, a U.N. car and guard posts, prompting NATO peacekeepers to rush British reinforcements to the city.

Maymana Hospital said one protester was shot dead and six were wounded, while some 50 others were hurt by tear gas the peacekeepers used to disperse the demonstrators.

One Norwegian soldier was injured by a splinter from a grenade, while another was hurt by a flying rock. Two Finnish soldiers were also hurt, Sverre Diesen, the Norwegian military commander, told reporters in Oslo.

Diesen said two American A-10 attack aircraft were on their way to the city and that a German C-130 transport plane was on standby in case some troops needed to evacuated.

U.N. spokesman Adrian Edwards said the world body's nonessential staff in Maymana were being driven from the city to an undisclosed location for security reasons.

The cartoons were first published by a Danish newspaper in September, then reprinted by a Norwegian newspaper last month, setting off violent protests against the two countries across the Muslim world. The cartoons have subsequently been reprinted in other media, mostly in Europe.

The drawings � including one depicting the prophet wearing a turban shaped as a bomb � have touched a raw nerve in part because Islam is interpreted to forbid any illustrations of the Prophet Muhammad for fear they could lead to idolatry.

In the Afghan capital of Kabul, police used batons to beat stone-throwing protesters outside the Danish diplomatic mission office and near the offices of the
World Bank on Tuesday. An Associated Press reporter saw police arrest several people, many of whom were injured.

Security had already been tightened in Kabul, home to some 3,000 foreign diplomats, aid workers and others. Police have set up barricades and peacekeepers have been on constant patrol.

More than 3,000 protesters threw stones at government buildings and an Italian peacekeeping base in the western city of Herat, but no one was injured, said a witness, Faridoon Pooyaa. Provincial administrator Asiluddin Jami said police fired warning shots to prevent the demonstrators from entering the buildings and the base.

About 5,000 people clashed with police in Pulikhumri town, north of Kabul, said Sayed Afandi, a police commander. There were no reports of injuries.

Police in about half a dozen other towns and cities across Afghanistan reported thousands of people protesting.

Demonstrations have been held across Afghanistan since last week, with the size of the crowds progressively swelling. On Monday, four people were killed and at least 19 hurt during clashes, including one outside Bagram, the main U.S. military base.

The protest in the northwestern Pakistani city of Peshawar was the largest to date in that Muslim country against the prophet drawings. There were no reports of violence.

Chief Minister Akram Durrani, the province's top elected official who led the rally, demanded the cartoonists "be punished like a terrorist."

"Islam is a religion of peace. It insists that all other religions and faiths should be respected," he told the crowd. "Nobody has the right to insult Islam and hurt the feelings of Muslims."

The Iranian newspaper Hamshahri invited foreign cartoonists to enter its Holocaust cartoon competition, which it said would be launched on Feb. 13. The newspaper is owned by the Tehran Municipality, which is dominated by allies of President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who is well known for his opposition to
Israel.

Last year, Ahmadinejad provoked outcries when he said on separate occasions that Israel should be "wiped off the map" and the Holocaust was a "myth."

Elsewhere, China criticized newspapers for publishing the cartoons and appealed for calm among outraged Muslims. Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Kong Quan said publishing the cartoons "runs counter to the principle that different religions and civilizations should respect each other and live together in peace and harmony."

Danish citizens were also advised to leave Indonesia, where rowdy protests were held in at least four cities Tuesday. Danish missions, which have been repeatedly targeted by protesters, have been shut because of security concerns, said Niels Erik Anderson, the country's ambassador to Indonesia.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said his government had temporarily closed diplomatic missions in Palestinian territories � where it shares a building with the Danish mission. He warned his citizens to be wary if traveling to the Middle East.

Media in both Australia and New Zealand have also published the images.
source
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Offline Anonymous

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« Reply #14 on: February 07, 2006, 10:14:00 AM »
Iran to take revenge on Denmark with Holocaust cartoons

Iran has reacted to Denmark�s publishing of the cartoons in turn. The largest state newspaper Hamshahiri which holds conservative views has announced that it will hold a competition to find the most amusing cartoon based on the theme of the Holocaust.

The rules of the competition will be published in a number of newspapers which are printed on Tuesday. The twelve people that send in the best cartoons will each receive gold rings from unnamed private individuals. It was decided that twelve prizes would be awarded since this is the number of cartoons portraying the Prophet Mohammed which were published in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten.

The graphic editor of the Iranian newspaper Farid Mortazawi said, �Western newspapers which printed these sacrilegious cartoons defend themselves by speaking of freedom of speech and self-expression. Therefore we shall see if they really follow these principles and will print the cartoons about the Holocaust.�

Yesterday a wave of protests by Muslims swept through Iran in connection with the publication of the cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed. Protestors tried to storm the building of the Danish Embassy in Tehran. Demonstrators threw petrol bombs and stones, broke windows and set fire to flags, chanted slogans against European countries, the USA and Israel. In the end the Iranian police managed to dispel the disturbances with tear gas. The mass demonstrations became more peaceful and had stopped by Tuesday morning. Police got the situation under control and eventually the protestors all dispersed. Interfax has said that according to official data given by the Iranians the embassy suffered only minor damage.

The conflict has arisen due to the publication in European newspapers of cartoons depicting the Prophet Mohammed. The cartoons were first printed last September in the Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten and have lead to mass protests by Muslims who have sacked and set fire to the embassies of European countries. The dispute is now even threatening to escalate and become a new source of conflict for civilization as a whole.

The fact that the embassies in Iran have connected the West�s decision to forbid Iran from making an atomic bomb and the cartoon scandal has played a significant role in the worsening of the situation.

Iran considers that the West in taking such action aims to insult and belittle the Muslim people and they have declared that the Islamic world will triumph.

The current objective of Iran is to cover up the controversy over their nuclear program with the �cartoon� scandal and they are attempting to bring the attention of the whole Muslim world to the huge conflict. Tehran is trying to call upon all Muslims to stage mass protests against the hostility shown towards Iran .

The Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Russia has spoken about the ongoing scandal and announced that the indignation felt by Iran is entirely predictable. However in some countries this reaction has led to unacceptable acts of vandalism towards foreign embassies.

One state official, a leading figure in the Russian Federation, has disregarded state law and has taken his own measures in connection with the instigators of the scandal.

Meanwhile, Ramzan Kadyrov, who is fulfilling the duties of the Prime Minster of Chechnya, has announced that the republic will no longer admit Danish organizations.

http://english.pravda.ru/world/asia/07- ... olocaust-0

-------

Hmmm .. what could possibly go wrong?  :lol:
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