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– Cartoon Wars
Cartoon wars and the clash of
civilizations
By Daniel McGrory and Dan Sabbagh
WESTERN governments appealed for calm yesterday before Friday prayers as
the storm over the publication and broadcast of cartoons of the Prophet
Muhammad escalated.
Masked Palestinian gunmen fired shots into the air and closed the EU
office in Gaza, saying it would stay shut until Western governments
apologised for their media printing images including a cartoon of a
bearded Muhammad with a bomb in his turban.
The BBC was drawn into the row after broadcasting the images on its main
evening bulletins. The move drew accusations from Muslim leaders that
the corporation was inciting racial hatred.
Channel 4 News and The Spectator magazine website also showed the
images, originally published in Denmark, dragging Britain into an
increasingly ugly confrontation between Islam and the West.
Western diplomats from Denmark and Norway began pulling out of their
missions in Gaza as gunmen searched hotels for Europeans from countries
where newspapers had printed the pictures, declaring them legitimate
targets.
The editor of a Jordanian newspaper that suggested Muslim anger was
unreasonable, was sacked by his publisher. Al-Shihan had run the
cartoons, arguing: “What brings more prejudice against Islam, these
caricatures or pictures of a hostage taker slashing the throat of his
victim?” Across the region, including Baghdad and Basra, Muslim leaders
called for protests after Friday prayers. Protests are also expected to
spread to European capitals after a dozen more publications in Germany,
Italy, the Netherlands and Spain carried the cartoons.
Senior BBC executives said last night that they would not be “bullied or
censored” into dropping the images, which were only shown as glimpses to
illustrate the story. There are no immediate plans to increase security
at BBC offices, though this will be kept under review. The Foreign and
Commonwealth Office said it was not changing its advice over travel to
Islamic countries.
Downing Street tried to distance itself from the row by saying it was
wrong for Tony Blair to tell the media what to do. Asked if he agreed
with Peter Mandelson, the EU Trade Commissioner, who urged newspapers to
think twice before publishing the cartoons, the Prime Minister’s
spokesman said: “This is entirely a matter for the media organisations
to decide what they ought to do within the law.” The BBC decided to show
the images after the managing editor of the French newspaper France Soir
was sacked for printing all 12 drawings in Wednesday’s edition.
Bulletins on domestic TV and on BBC World carried the cartoons, which a
spokesman said were broadcast “responsibly” and “in full context” and
“to give audiences an understanding of the strong feelings evoked by the
story”. It is understood that neither Mark Thompson, the BBC
Director-General, nor the governors were consulted over broadcasting the
cartoons.
Last night both the Muslim Association and the militant Islamic group
Hizb-ut-Tahrir in Britain condemned the BBC’s behaviour and pleaded with
it to drop the broadcasts.
A spokesman for the Muslim Association said: “The BBC is inciting racial
hatred and not conducting a serious debate on freedom of speech. This
threatens to become another Salman Rushdie affair.”
A senior figure in Hizb-ut Tahrir said: “It’s become open season by
media to insult Islam. There was no need for the BBC to reproduce them,
but we would urge protesters to be peaceful but vocal”.
The main BBC news bulletins filmed a page from the French newspaper that
carried the images of Muhammad including one of him urging suicide
bombers to cut down attacks as he was running out of virgins in
paradise.
Newsnight on BBC2 did not show the cartoons last night, using obscured
shots of the newspapers carrying the images instead. An artist drew
sections of the cartoons, but did not include the depictions of
Muhammad. ITN went ahead with plans to show the image on its 10.30
bulletin.
The Spectator briefly carried them on its website but acting editor,
Stuart Reid, pulled them a few hours later after consulting Andrew Neil,
the chief executive, saying they were “unnecessarily provocative”.
In diplomatic protests, Syria and Saudi Arabia have recalled their
ambassadors to Denmark, and Libya has closed its embassy in Copenhagen.
Following the threats by Gaza gunmen, Hamas, which won last week’s
Palestinian elections, moved quickly to reassure Westerners that it
would not target them.
Visiting the Holy Family Church, Dr Mahmoud al-Zahar, Hamas’s senior
leader in Gaza, promised protection to Christians. He told Father Manuel
Musallam that he was prepared to station gunmen to protect the building,
telling him: “You are our brothers.”
However, the Egyptian President, Hosni Mubarak, said that the decision
to publish the cartoons could encourage terrorists. The Afghan President
Hamid Karzai also condemned their publication.
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