CAIRO,
February 8, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) – Danish newspapers are twisting
facts and putting the Muslim minority on the defensive by launching a
charm offensive claiming falsely that Danish Muslims had used a photo
mocking at Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon him) and made
too much ado about nothing, a Danish Muslim leader said Wednesday,
February 8.
“They
want to turn people’s attention to another issue to divert attention
from the publication of the dozen cartoons that mocked Prophet
Muhammad,” Mohammad Al-Khalid Samha, a member of the European
Committee for Prophet Honoring and leader of the Danish Muslim
delegation who visited Egypt and Saudi Arabia, told IOL over the phone
from Odense.
“On
September 30, Jyallands Posten published the first set of
cartoons, which were followed two or three weeks by another offensive
set published by Weekend Avisen,” Samha, also a mosque imam
in Odense, explained.
“After
the publication appeared to be slipping out of control, we sent
letters of protest to Jyallands Posten with our names and
e-mails written below, then we received threats, swear words and a
third set of pictures from racists including a photo of a man from a
pig-squealing contest [in France] and the name ‘Muhammad’ written
down.”
Samha
asserted that when he showed the photos to reporters at a press
conference in Cairo following his meetings with Arab League Secretary
General Amr Moussa and Grand Imam of Al-Azhar Sheikh Sayed Tantawi, he
made it very clear that this photo was sent to Danish Muslims by
e-mail.
“I
never said, as Danish newspapers now claim, that this photo was
published by Jyallands Posten,” he fumed. “The TV cameras,
which aired the news conference, took the photo but left the sound.”
Denmark
has been the focus of Muslim rage since images -- one showing the
Prophet with a turban resembling a bomb -- first appeared in the Posten
and were subsequently published elsewhere in Europe.
Newspapers
in Bulgaria, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, Switzerland, Hungary, New
Zealand, Poland, the United States, Japan, Norway, Malaysia,
Australia, Jordan, Yemen, Ukraine and Fiji have so far reprinted some
of the dozen cartoons.
The
satirical French weekly Charlie Hebdo Wednesday printed all 12
of the controversial cartoons as well as a new front-page caricature
of its own.
Insufficient
Apology
 |
|
Samha said this photo was not published by the newspaper at issue, but was sent to e-mails of Danish Muslims from racists.
|
Samha
blamed the Jyallands Posten chief editor for his insufficient
apology.
“He
should have apologized for hurting the feelings of Muslims and
publishing the photos, not just for hurting Muslims. If he had done
this, the crisis would have been nipped in the bud.”
Jyllands-Posten
has recently said the cartoons “were not in violation of Danish law
but have irrefutably offended many Muslims, and for that we
apologize.”
The
Danish editor who first published them regretted the caricatures
saying he would not have done so if he had known the consequences.
“If
I had known that the lives of Danish soldiers and civilians would be
threatened, if I had known that as my finger hovered one centimeter
above the send button for publishing the drawings, would I have hit
it? No,” Jyllands-Posten editor-in-chief Carsten Juste told
the Politiken daily earlier in the month.
Stop
Violence
The
Muslim leader strongly denounced the violent protests in some Muslim
countries over the cartoons crisis, urging Muslims to vent their anger
in a civilized way.
“We
can never condone the burning of embassies and public properties as a
way to protest the cartoons,” Samha said.
“This
is a repugnant crime and a grisly act that badly affected our cause as
we are accused now of inciting such attacks.”
He
said dialogue is the one and only way to defuse the crisis, not
violence.
“We
embarked on our tour and explained to Muslim scholars and leaders in
Egypt our position and tackled the issue in a civilized and a calm
way,” he said.
“If
we really had added fuel to the fire as claimed by some Danish
newspapers, we would have heard about shootings, killings or violent
protests in Egypt."
The
violent protests took place in the countries which the Danish Muslim
delegation did not visit.
Muslims
protesting against the cartoons set fire to the Danish consulate in
Beirut Sunday after Syrian protesters had done the same with the
Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus a day earlier.
Muslim
scholars, organizations and leaders were united Sunday in condemning
the violent attacks against the embassies.
“Some
people, who have nothing to do with Islam, have jumped on the
bandwagon to achieve personal gains,” he said.
Pundits
say that some regimes in the Muslim world have tried to make capital
of the crisis by stepping up their campaigns against the cartoons and
making several press statements over the issue to outweigh the rising
Islamist groups.
On
the way out of the current crisis, Samha said Muslim leaders are
pressing now for an international resolution criminalizing blasphemy
“and will continue with our peaceful dialogue with our
government.”