Hieronder eerst een stukje uit Egypte, waar de Mohammedaans geïndoctrineerden een excuus eisen van de Christenen voor een toneelstukje waarin naar hun mening het Mohammedanisme zou beledigd zijn.
Dan een stukje uit Denemarken, waar een krant de vrijheid van meningsuiting testte.
Van daar naar Van Gogh, maar dat verhaal is hier genoegzaam bekend.
Wij lijken reeds lang aanvaard te hebben dat in het Midden-Oosten het Mohammedanisme bepaalt wat mag gepropageerd worden maar wij zijn druk bezig dat Mohammedaanse recht ook in de EU te introduceren.
Zijn er grote betogingen geweest in de Vrije Wereld tegen de intimidaties vanwege de Mohammedaanse wereld aan het adres van Denemarken? Zijn er vragen geweest rond waar landen zoals Indonesië, de Organisatie van Arabische Staten, , Pakistan, Iran, en Bosnië-Herzegovina zich mee komen bemoeien?
Egypte
http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2005/765/eg6.htm
One step forward, two steps back
The latest Muslim-Christian dispute may have been peacefully defused, but Mustafa El-Menshawy, in Alexandria, senses tension in the air
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Last week's sectarian tension in Alexandria began in much the same way previous Muslim-Christian disputes had: with the publication of a tabloid story. This time, the newspaper in question -- Al-Midan -- published an article about a church play that defamed Islam. The play -- which begins with a poor Christian university student converting to Islam after a group of Muslim men offer him money to do so -- was called I was blind but now I can see. The twist in the plot comes when the convert later decides to return to Christianity. The same Muslims then threaten him with violence.
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But while the demonstration may have ended peacefully after the police intervened, the tension in the Muharram Bek neighbourhood is far from defused. Its most visible sign are the dozens of armoured vehicles surrounding the Saint George Church. Local Muslims are insisting that the church, as well as Coptic leaders in the Mediterranean coastal city, should apologise for the performance. "Pope Shenouda [the head of Egypt's Coptic Church] must offer an apology," said Ahmed El-Guindi, whose house is next door to the church, "and those directly involved in insulting Islam on stage inside the church have to be put on trial."
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Denemarken
http://www.denmark.dk/portal/page?_pageid=...&_schema=PORTAL
21 October 2005
Cartoons raise fears of terror attacks
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The newspaper asked illustrators to make the cartoons after reports that artists were reluctant to illustrate a book on Mohammed for fear of Muslim retribution. The daily's editors said the cartoons were a test of whether the threat of Islamic terrorism had limited the freedom of expression in Denmark.
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Muslim organisations in Denmark, such as the Islamic Religious Community, have demanded an apology, but Editor-in-Chief Carsten Juste rejected the idea. He said the cartoons had been a journalistic project to find out how many cartoonists refrained from drawing the prophet out of fear.
'We live in a democracy,' he said. 'That's why we can use all the journalistic methods we want to. Satire is accepted in this country, and you can make caricatures. Religion shouldn't set any barriers on that sort of expression. This doesn't mean that we wish to insult any Muslims.'
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In addition to Indonesia, a number of Arab states, Pakistan, Iran, and Bosnia-Herzegovina have complained about the cartoons, which they see as a hate campaign against Muslims in Denmark.
Fears of al-Queda operations
Fourteen days ago, sources in the Italian intelligence service warned that a Moroccan group with a connection to the al-Queda network had members in Scandinavia.
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