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Bekijk Volledige Versie : Reacties van Prominenten op de cartoons van over de wereld



Coolassprov MC
04-02-06, 16:21
http://news.independent.co.uk/world/middle_east/article343110.ece


Speaking out: Views on cartoon outcry
Published: 04 February 2006
Inayat Bunglawala, of the Muslim Council of Britain: "This plays into the hands of Muslim extremists. Many people at Friday prayers will want to express their anger, but we say do it within the law."

Jonathan Sachs, Chief Rabbi: "The only way to have freedom of speech and freedom from religious hatred is to exercise restraint. The question is: can we learn to respect what others hold holy?"

Abdullah Wahim, teacher, outside the Danish Embassy in London: "If someone said something offensive about my mother, I would deal with it, but if they insulted the Prophet it would be worse."

Munira Mizra, British journalist: "Many Muslims want the same freedoms as everyone else to debate and criticise."

Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford: "Freedom of speech is fundamental but this needs to be exercised responsibly."

Afreen Parvez, in Saudi Arabia: "Europe and the West doesn't understand Muslims. Shops here are removing Danish products. The boycott is the only peaceful way we can retaliate."

Hamid Karzai, Afghan president: "As much as we condemn this, we must have the courage to forgive. But that doesn't mean that insulting cartoons about Islam must continue."

LA Times editorial: "The cartoons are undeniably offensive ... Yet the overreaction by authoritarian governments and back-peddling European officials has been disappointing."

Jihad Momani, editor, Al Shihan, Jordan: "Muslims of the world be reasonable. What brings more prejudice against Islam, these caricatures or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras."

Ramzy Baroud, of the Al Ahram Weekly, Egypt: "The anti-Danish campaign will widen a chasm separating both worlds, bolstering the Arabs' reputation of being intolerant while providing an unimportant cartoonist with the opportunity of a lifetime."

Die Welt editorial, Germany: "Islam will only become an accepted religion when there are as many jokes about Mohamed as there are about Jesus, Moses and Buddha."

Inayat Bunglawala, of the Muslim Council of Britain: "This plays into the hands of Muslim extremists. Many people at Friday prayers will want to express their anger, but we say do it within the law."

Jonathan Sachs, Chief Rabbi: "The only way to have freedom of speech and freedom from religious hatred is to exercise restraint. The question is: can we learn to respect what others hold holy?"

Abdullah Wahim, teacher, outside the Danish Embassy in London: "If someone said something offensive about my mother, I would deal with it, but if they insulted the Prophet it would be worse."

Munira Mizra, British journalist: "Many Muslims want the same freedoms as everyone else to debate and criticise."

Richard Harries, Bishop of Oxford: "Freedom of speech is fundamental but this needs to be exercised responsibly."

Afreen Parvez, in Saudi Arabia: "Europe and the West doesn't understand Muslims. Shops here are removing Danish products. The boycott is the only peaceful way we can retaliate."
Hamid Karzai, Afghan president: "As much as we condemn this, we must have the courage to forgive. But that doesn't mean that insulting cartoons about Islam must continue."

LA Times editorial: "The cartoons are undeniably offensive ... Yet the overreaction by authoritarian governments and back-peddling European officials has been disappointing."

Jihad Momani, editor, Al Shihan, Jordan: "Muslims of the world be reasonable. What brings more prejudice against Islam, these caricatures or pictures of a hostage-taker slashing the throat of his victim in front of the cameras."

Ramzy Baroud, of the Al Ahram Weekly, Egypt: "The anti-Danish campaign will widen a chasm separating both worlds, bolstering the Arabs' reputation of being intolerant while providing an unimportant cartoonist with the opportunity of a lifetime."

Die Welt editorial, Germany: "Islam will only become an accepted religion when there are as many jokes about Mohamed as there are about Jesus, Moses and Buddha."