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View Full Version : Muslims Swear Vengence on French Cartoon Drawings?



Black Dynamite
02-02-2006, 01:35 PM
Ok you talk shit about every other religion as evil and then get testy when you get joked on.

Rage at Drawings Spreads in Muslim World

By IBRAHIM BARZAK, Associated Press Writer 45 minutes ago

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip - Armed militants angered by a cartoon drawing of the Prophet Muhammad published in European newspapers surrounded EU offices in Gaza on Thursday and threatened to kidnap foreigners as outrage over the caricatures spread across the Islamic world.

More than 300 students demonstrated in Pakistan, chanting "Death to France!" and "Death to Denmark!" — two of the countries where newspapers published the drawings. Other protests were held in
Syria and Lebanon, while officials in Afghanistan,
Iran and Indonesia condemned the publication. In Paris, the daily France Soir fired its managing editor after it ran the caricatures Wednesday.

A Jordanian newspaper took the bold step of running some of the drawings, saying it wanted to show its readers how offensive the cartoons were, although its editor also said he did not want "to promote such blasphemy." In an editorial, it also urged the world's Muslims to "be reasonable."

Foreign journalists, diplomats and aid workers began leaving Gaza as gunmen there threatened to kidnap citizens of France, Norway, Denmark and Germany unless those governments apologize for the cartoon.

Gunmen in the
West Bank city of Nablus entered four hotels to search for foreigners to abduct and warned their owners not to host guests from several European countries. Gunmen said they were also searching apartments in Nablus for Europeans.

Militants in Gaza said they would shut down media offices from France, Norway, Denmark and Germany, singling out the French news agency Agence France Presse.

"Any citizens of these countries, who are present in Gaza, will put themselves in danger," a
Fatah-affiliated gunman said outside the EU Commission's office in Gaza, flanked by two masked men holding rifles.

If the European governments don't apologize by Thursday evening, "any visitor of these countries will be targeted," he said.

The furor over the drawings, which first ran in the Danish paper Jyllands-Posten in September, cuts to the question of which is more sacred in the Western world — freedom of expression or respect for religious beliefs. The cartoons include an image of Muhammad wearing a turban shaped as a bomb with a burning fuse.

Islamic law, based on clerics' interpretation of the Quran and the sayings of the prophet, absolutely forbids depictions, even positive ones, of the Prophet Muhammad in order to prevent idolatry.

The drawings have prompted boycotts of Danish goods, bomb threats and demonstrations against Danish facilities.

The Danish newspaper defended its decision to publish the caricatures, citing freedom of expression, but apologized to Muslims for causing offense.

France Soir and several other European papers reprinted the drawings in solidarity with the Danish daily. Jyllands-Posten also had put some of the drawings briefly on its Web site, and the images still can be found elsewhere on the Internet.

The Israeli newspaper Maariv published a tiny version of the Muhammad-bomb caricature Thursday, on page 16.

Foreign journalists were pulling out of Gaza on Thursday, and foreign media organizations were canceling plans to send more people in.

Norway suspended operations at its office in the West Bank town of Ram after receiving threats connected to publication of the cartoons by the Norwegian Christian newspaper Magazinet.

"There were threats from two Palestinian groups, the Popular Resistance Committees and the Al Aqsa Martyrs' Brigades, against Danish, French and Norwegian diplomats," Norwegian Foreign Ministry spokesman Rune Bjaastad said.

Jan Pirouz Poulsen, the Danish representative office's deputy head, said there were six Danes in Gaza and about 20 in the West Bank, and that all had been urged to leave.

Raif Holmboe, the head of Denmark's representative office in the West Bank town of Ramallah, said the office would be closed Friday and no decision has been made whether to reopen Monday. Holmboe said shots were fired at the Ramallah office earlier this week while the building was empty. No one was hurt.

Palestinian security officials said they would try to protect foreigners in Gaza, but police have largely been unable to do so in the past, with 19 foreigners kidnapped — and released unharmed — in recent months, mostly by Fatah gunmen.

Emma Udwin, a
European Union spokeswoman in Brussels, said security measures have been taken in light of the threats.

Outgoing Palestinian Prime Minister Ahmed Qureia condemned the caricatures, saying they "provoke all Muslims everywhere in the world." He asked gunmen not to attack foreigners, "but we warn that emotions may flare in this very sensitive issues."

Sami Abu Zuhri, a spokesman for the Islamic militant Hamas also demanded an apology from European countries. However, he said foreigners in Gaza must not be harmed.

Thursday's events began when a dozen gunmen with ties to Fatah approached the office of the EU Commission in Gaza. Three jumped on the outer wall and the rest took up positions at the entrance. The group demanded the apologies and urged Palestinians to boycott the products of Norway, Denmark, France and Germany.

A leaflet signed by a Fatah militia and the militant Islamic Jihad group said the EU office and churches in Gaza could come under attack and urged French citizens to leave Gaza. The gunmen left after about 45 minutes. Palestinian employees of the EU Commission had not come to work Thursday, and foreigners working at the office are based outside Gaza, and only visit from time to time.

In Multan, Pakistan, more than 300 Islamic students chanted "Death to Denmark!" and "Death to France!" and burned flags of both countries near an Islamic school.

Iraqi Islamic leaders called for demonstrations from Baghdad to the southern city of Basra following prayer services Friday.

Afghanistan President Hamid Karzai condemned the images, calling the publication an "insult ... to more than 1 billion Muslims."

Indonesian Foreign Ministry spokesman Yuri Thamrin said that while his country upholds free expression, "such freedom cannot be used as a pretext to insult a religion." The Indonesian newspaper Rakyat Merdeka put the Muhammad-bomb caricature on its Web site to illustrate its story about the uproar but covered his eyes with a red banner to avoid making the image "vulgar," a caption said.

Iran summoned Austrian Ambassador Stigel Bauer, representing the European Union, to protest the publication, the Islamic Republic News Agency reported. Bauer expressed "sorrow" and promised to convey Iran's protest to his government and other EU countries, IRNA said.

The Jordanian newspaper Shihan ran three of the caricatures, saying it was reprinting them to show readers "the extent of the Danish offense." Next to the drawings, the weekly said: "This is how the Danish newspaper portrayed Prophet Muhammad, may God's blessing and peace be upon him."

Shihan's editor-in-chief, Jihad al-Momani, told The Associated Press that he decided to run the cartoons to "display to the public the extent of the Danish offense and condemn it in the strongest terms."

"But their publication is not meant in any way to promote such blasphemy," al-Momani added.

An editorial signed by al-Momani and titled "Muslims of the world, be reasonable," questioned what sparked the outrage now, since the cartoons were first published in September. It said the Danish paper had apologized, "but for some reason, nobody in the Muslim world wants to hear the apology."

Morocco and Tunisia barred sales of France Soir's Wednesday issue.

The director of media rights group Reporters Without Borders, Robert Menard, called for calm. "We need to figure out how to reconcile freedom of expression and respect of faith," he said.

Vebjoern Selbekk, editor of Norway's Magazinet newspaper, said he had received thousands of hate e-mails, including 20 death threats, since printing the drawings and was under police protection

Fool
02-02-2006, 02:27 PM
Note to Taymelo: Never go to Pakistan. You will be killed on sight.

UncleCliffy
02-02-2006, 02:28 PM
LOL@Muslims.

LOL@Jews.

LOL@Christians.

LOL@Everyone not affiliated with these religions.

LOL@Tonya Harding.

Darth Thanatos
02-02-2006, 02:30 PM
LMFAO

Great find.

DennyMcLain
02-02-2006, 04:57 PM
I say, let them die, and do nothing.

That'll teach those Urinepeeins, right GDB????

Black Dynamite
02-02-2006, 05:31 PM
ya know the worst thing is that extremist muslims dont stick to their guns


Islamic law, based on clerics' interpretation of the Quran and the sayings of the prophet, absolutely forbids depictions, even positive ones, of the Prophet Muhammad in order to prevent idolatry.
yet its cool look up to people who blow themselves up and osama as a leader. ironic.

so their response to being depicted as terrorists in a cartoon is terrorism threats. way to go. [smilie=applause.gi:

Anthony
02-02-2006, 05:42 PM
Fuck the french.




It had to be said. Fuck em'

GotCrotty?
02-02-2006, 08:06 PM
Fuck the French,

Fuck the middle east.

I really feel horrible saying this, and this is not negative towards arabs/jews and whatever else lives in that shithole of a region.

That entire place needs to be wiped off the globe, and you'd solve over half of the worlds issues.

Take their money from oil, give it to Africa to feed themselves, thats my plan.

the wrath of diddy
02-02-2006, 09:49 PM
A Jordanian newspaper printed the cartoons too. A message accompanied said: Muslims in the world, be reasonable. What brings more prejudice against Islam? These cartoons or pics of kidnappers who are slicing throats in front of the camera or a suicide killer that blows himself up during a wedding in Amman.










Within a week the editor was fired.

UncleCliffy
02-02-2006, 10:16 PM
Fuck the French,

Fuck the middle east.

I really feel horrible saying this, and this is not negative towards arabs/jews and whatever else lives in that shithole of a region.

That entire place needs to be wiped off the globe, and you'd solve over half of the worlds issues.

Take their money from oil, give it to Africa to feed themselves, thats my plan.

Here is my plan.

Take Israel, Lebanon, and Syria. Make those 3 countries into a huge waterfront Las Vegas. Leave Iraq/Saudi Arabia as is for oil purposes to fund these projects. I'd turn Yemen into a huge putt putt golf course with a lot of windmills. I'd take Oman and turn it into a mass industrial country. This will supply my invention to the world "Microwaveable Gyros". UAE will be used for pita bread bakeries. Guys, this plan will bring world peace. Oh yeah, what would you do with all the displaced Arabs/Israelis? Ship them to Anarctica. Fuck them and their nice weather monopoly. Let them get a taste of cold weather for once.

Black Dynamite
02-02-2006, 10:22 PM
Fuck the French,

Fuck the middle east.

I really feel horrible saying this, and this is not negative towards arabs/jews and whatever else lives in that shithole of a region.

That entire place needs to be wiped off the globe, and you'd solve over half of the worlds issues.

Take their money from oil, give it to Africa to feed themselves, thats my plan.

Here is my plan.

Take Israel, Lebanon, and Syria. Make those 3 countries into a huge waterfront Las Vegas. Leave Iraq/Saudi Arabia as is for oil purposes to fund these projects. I'd turn Yemen into a huge putt putt golf course with a lot of windmills. I'd take Oman and turn it into a mass industrial country. This will supply my invention to the world "Microwaveable Gyros". UAE will be used for pita bread bakeries. Guys, this plan will bring world peace. Oh yeah, what would you do with all the displaced Arabs/Israelis? Ship them to Anarctica. Fuck them and their nice weather monopoly. Let them get a taste of cold weather for once.
sorry, but bush has already put a patent on that plan himself.

H1Man
02-03-2006, 01:17 AM
Do you guys even realize what the fucking cartoon was portraying?


The cartoons include an image of Muhammad wearing a turban shaped as a bomb with a burning fuse.

If an Islamic paper did that with Jesus, people would be urging US and the rest of the Christian world to nuke that country.

Black Dynamite
02-03-2006, 10:40 AM
Do you guys even realize what the fucking cartoon was portraying?


The cartoons include an image of Muhammad wearing a turban shaped as a bomb with a burning fuse.

If an Islamic paper did that with Jesus, people would be urging US and the rest of the Christian world to nuke that country.
only evangelist extremists would. otherwise fuck em. i think the many tapes aqnd video on al jazerra glorifying terrorists and their abuse/torture/kidnapping/murder of other people around the world.

so its worse to joke on on a religious group vs swearing to wipe them off the face of the earth like islamic fundamentalists do wityh israel.

im sorry, but murderous genocidal outrage is not a natural reaction to cartoons. So their religion doesn't express tolerence to trivial things?

GotCrotty?
02-03-2006, 12:32 PM
The fucking problem with this world is everyone takes offense to everything.

Make fun of Jesus all you want, I'm christian, I don't care, its not my job to slit your throat if you are anti-jesus and poke fun at him.

Tap Tap the Chiseler
02-08-2006, 10:23 PM
Fuck them all. They should riot over "Ziggy" anyway.

Black Dynamite
02-14-2006, 06:32 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/s/nm/20060214/ts_nm/religion_pakistan_cartoons_dc

ok these guys just burned down a perfectly good mcDonalds in their own country over this.

damn they could atleast saved the chicken selects and mcnuggets. this shit is inhumane.

And they fucked up the Pizza Hut? I can understand the KFC. But Pizza Hut? Pakistanis don't like stuffed cheese crust? WTF?

Unibomber
02-14-2006, 06:41 PM
LOL@Tonya Harding.

Now this man has his priorities straight.

I wanna see the goddamn cartoons already! Someone grow a pair and print them.

Vinny
02-17-2006, 01:08 PM
LOL@Tonya Harding.

Now this man has his priorities straight.

I wanna see the goddamn cartoons already! Someone grow a pair and print them.
Google.

http://permanent.nouvelobs.com/dossiers/documents/danemark_musulmans.html

Vinny
02-17-2006, 01:08 PM
This is out of hand:

http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20060217/ap_on_re_mi_ea/prophet_drawings

Cleric: $1 Million to Kill Cartoonist By RIAZ KHAN, Associated Press Writer
2 hours, 3 minutes ago



PESHAWAR, Pakistan - A Pakistani cleric announced Friday a $1 million bounty for killing a cartoonist who drew Prophet Muhammad, as thousands joined street protests and Denmark temporarily closed its embassy and advised its citizens to leave the country.

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Police confined the former leader of an Islamic militant group to his home to prevent him from addressing supporters over the cartoons, amid fears he could incite violence, after riots this week killed five people.

Security forces were out in strength, particularly around government offices and Western businesses, as Muslims streamed onto the streets after Friday prayers. More than 200 people were detained, but most gatherings were peaceful.

In neighboring India, police used batons and tear gas to disperse thousands of angry worshippers who rioted in the southern city of Hyderabad. They burned Danish flags, pelted police with stones, and looted shops. Hundreds more protested in Bangladesh.

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

Qureshi 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 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.

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.

In Islamabad, 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 on a visit to sign an HIV- AIDS project by his foundation.

Denmark announced it had temporarily closed its embassy in Pakistan. It also advised against all travel to Pakistan and urged Danes still in the country to leave.

"We have decided to do so because of the general security situation in the country," Foreign Ministry spokesman Lars Thuesen said.

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

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

Unrest over the cartoons has spiraled in Pakistan, even as it has ebbed in the rest of Asia and in the Middle East. Big riots in Lahore and Peshawar this week caused millions of dollars in damage, as hundreds of vehicles were burned and protesters targeted numerous U.S. and other foreign-brand businesses, including KFC, McDonald's, Citibank, Holiday Inn and Norwegian cell phone company Telenor.

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

On Friday, police confined Jamaat al-Dawat's leader, Hafiz Mohammed Saeed, to his home in Lahore to stop him from addressing supporters in the city of Faisalabad, about 75 miles away, his spokesman Yahya Mujahid said.

Saeed used to lead Lashkar-e-Tayyaba, a militant group closely associated with Jamaat al-Dawat and banned by Musharraf four years ago.

A senior police official in Lahore who confirmed Saeed's detention said the government had ordered police 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."

The official spoke on condition of anonymity as he wasn't authorized to discuss the matter with media because of its sensitivity.

Police used tear gas and batons in isolated incidents at Friday's protests, but generally they were free of violence. About 7,000 protested in Rawalpindi, 5,000 in the southwestern city of Quetta and 5,000 in Karachi.

Black Dynamite
02-17-2006, 01:25 PM
This Shit just got chuck Nevitt code red level.


What would you do with the million dollars from this hitman lottery?

b-diddy
02-17-2006, 01:49 PM
its pretty funny that so many of you are saying that the islams are overreacting so we should exterminate them.

and does that bounty really surprise anyone. not me. that newspaper decided to piss on a hornets nest.

anyone else feel like WWIII is on its way? whats scary is that theres a large % of our population would welcome it. of course, they will be the same people who are most outraged when the war isnt fought on our terms.

UncleCliffy
02-17-2006, 02:48 PM
No. I'm not for exterminating anyone. My theory is just let them be and don't bother them but also don't let them migrate to Europe/NA.

No. WW3 is not on its way. Too many corporations/globalism to have a world war.