Gold9472
02-18-2006, 05:17 PM
Ministers forced out as cartoon row escalates
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-02-18T195732Z_01_L18607690_RTRUKOC_0_US-RELIGION-CARTOONS.xml&archived=False
By Silvia Aloisi
Sat Feb 18, 2006 2:57 PM ET
ROME (Reuters) - The row over controversial Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad forced two ministers out of their jobs in Europe and the Middle East on Saturday after clashes between police and protesters claimed 11 lives in Libya.
The protest in Benghazi was the bloodiest so far over caricatures of the Prophet that Muslims regard as blasphemous.
Initially resisting calls for his resignation, Italian Reforms Minister Roberto Calderoli stepped down after he was widely blamed for bloody clashes in Libya over cartoons of the Prophet which he had made into T-shirts and wore on television.
In Tripoli, the General People's Congress fired Interior Minister Nasser al-Mabrouk Abdallah and police chiefs in Benghazi saying "disproportionate force" had been used to disperse protesters who tried to storm the Italian consulate.
The Congress hailed the dead as "martyrs" and declared Sunday a day of mourning across Libya.
Italian diplomats in Tripoli said Libyan authorities had told them at least 11 were dead and nearly 40 wounded.
After Calderoli resigned, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi spoke with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi by phone. "(They) fully agreed that this serious episode must not affect in a negative way the friendly relations between Italy and Libya," Berlusconi's office said in a statement.
As thousands of Muslims rallied in central London to keep up the cycle of cartoon protests around the world, there was fresh bloodshed in Pakistan when four people were wounded in gunfire at a demonstration in the central Punjab region.
Protests in Pakistan this week have resulted in at least five deaths, and on Friday it became the latest country where Denmark has decided to temporarily close its embassy. Denmark urged any Danes in Pakistan to leave as soon as possible.
In a bid to harness the escalating violence, Pakistan on Saturday banned protests in Islamabad. As the ban was introduced the country's main Islamist alliance, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), said it would go ahead with its Sunday demonstration,
"The rally will be held in Islamabad. It will be a peaceful rally," Shahid Shamsi, an MMA spokesman said.
The cartoons, one of which shows the Prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb, were first published in Denmark in September, but last month newspapers in Europe and elsewhere republished them to assert freedom of expression.
FURY ACROSS THE MUSLIM WORLD
The publications caused outrage across Europe, the Middle East and Africa, becoming a showdown between religious tolerance and freedom of speech.
Muslims believe images of the Prophet are forbidden but moderate Muslims, although finding the cartoons deeply offensive, fear radicals are hijacking the issue to deepen rifts between the Muslim world and the West.
The shooting in Pakistan on Saturday occurred as hundreds of protesters pelted police with stones and tried to block a road in the town of Chiniot. It was unclear whether police or protesters fired the shots.
Police detained 40 activists of the student wing of an Islamist group in the city of Multan as they staged a protest in defiance of a government ban on public rallies in Punjab.
Protests in Pakistan have been large and violent and many have taken on a distinctly anti-U.S. tone. In addition to burning Danish flags, demonstrators have attacked U.S. fast-food outlets and burned effigies of U.S. President George W. Bush, who is scheduled to visit Pakistan next month.
Muslim protesters burned several churches in Nigeria's northeastern state of Borno on Saturday after police fired tear gas to disperse a cartoons protest, officials said.
It was the first violent protest over the controversial cartoons in Africa's most populous country of over 140 million people divided about equally between Christians and Muslims.
Britain's Muslim Action Committee (MAC) which organized the London event said they expected 40,000 to rally peacefully in Trafalgar Square. A police spokeswoman said 10,000 were present. One placard read: "Free Speech = Cheap Insults"
Around 1,000 people protested in Copenhagen on Saturday against the cartoons.
On Friday, a Pakistani Muslim cleric and his followers offered rewards amounting to more than $1 million for anyone who killed the Danish cartoonists who drew the caricatures.
ne of the cartoonists, asking for anonymity, said this has not been the first threat.
"This is not the first time we've been threatened, but of course I dislike it every time. The drawing I made was meant as a practical joke aimed at the paper and yet I have been dragged into this absurd situation," the cartoonist told Reuters.
"I didn't think anyone outside the newspaper's readers would see the cartoon and now a billion people have. It's a surreal situation."
(Reporting from European, Asian and Middle Eastern bureaux)
http://today.reuters.com/news/newsArticle.aspx?type=topNews&storyID=2006-02-18T195732Z_01_L18607690_RTRUKOC_0_US-RELIGION-CARTOONS.xml&archived=False
By Silvia Aloisi
Sat Feb 18, 2006 2:57 PM ET
ROME (Reuters) - The row over controversial Danish cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad forced two ministers out of their jobs in Europe and the Middle East on Saturday after clashes between police and protesters claimed 11 lives in Libya.
The protest in Benghazi was the bloodiest so far over caricatures of the Prophet that Muslims regard as blasphemous.
Initially resisting calls for his resignation, Italian Reforms Minister Roberto Calderoli stepped down after he was widely blamed for bloody clashes in Libya over cartoons of the Prophet which he had made into T-shirts and wore on television.
In Tripoli, the General People's Congress fired Interior Minister Nasser al-Mabrouk Abdallah and police chiefs in Benghazi saying "disproportionate force" had been used to disperse protesters who tried to storm the Italian consulate.
The Congress hailed the dead as "martyrs" and declared Sunday a day of mourning across Libya.
Italian diplomats in Tripoli said Libyan authorities had told them at least 11 were dead and nearly 40 wounded.
After Calderoli resigned, Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi spoke with Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi by phone. "(They) fully agreed that this serious episode must not affect in a negative way the friendly relations between Italy and Libya," Berlusconi's office said in a statement.
As thousands of Muslims rallied in central London to keep up the cycle of cartoon protests around the world, there was fresh bloodshed in Pakistan when four people were wounded in gunfire at a demonstration in the central Punjab region.
Protests in Pakistan this week have resulted in at least five deaths, and on Friday it became the latest country where Denmark has decided to temporarily close its embassy. Denmark urged any Danes in Pakistan to leave as soon as possible.
In a bid to harness the escalating violence, Pakistan on Saturday banned protests in Islamabad. As the ban was introduced the country's main Islamist alliance, Muttahida Majlis-e-Amal (MMA), said it would go ahead with its Sunday demonstration,
"The rally will be held in Islamabad. It will be a peaceful rally," Shahid Shamsi, an MMA spokesman said.
The cartoons, one of which shows the Prophet wearing a turban shaped like a bomb, were first published in Denmark in September, but last month newspapers in Europe and elsewhere republished them to assert freedom of expression.
FURY ACROSS THE MUSLIM WORLD
The publications caused outrage across Europe, the Middle East and Africa, becoming a showdown between religious tolerance and freedom of speech.
Muslims believe images of the Prophet are forbidden but moderate Muslims, although finding the cartoons deeply offensive, fear radicals are hijacking the issue to deepen rifts between the Muslim world and the West.
The shooting in Pakistan on Saturday occurred as hundreds of protesters pelted police with stones and tried to block a road in the town of Chiniot. It was unclear whether police or protesters fired the shots.
Police detained 40 activists of the student wing of an Islamist group in the city of Multan as they staged a protest in defiance of a government ban on public rallies in Punjab.
Protests in Pakistan have been large and violent and many have taken on a distinctly anti-U.S. tone. In addition to burning Danish flags, demonstrators have attacked U.S. fast-food outlets and burned effigies of U.S. President George W. Bush, who is scheduled to visit Pakistan next month.
Muslim protesters burned several churches in Nigeria's northeastern state of Borno on Saturday after police fired tear gas to disperse a cartoons protest, officials said.
It was the first violent protest over the controversial cartoons in Africa's most populous country of over 140 million people divided about equally between Christians and Muslims.
Britain's Muslim Action Committee (MAC) which organized the London event said they expected 40,000 to rally peacefully in Trafalgar Square. A police spokeswoman said 10,000 were present. One placard read: "Free Speech = Cheap Insults"
Around 1,000 people protested in Copenhagen on Saturday against the cartoons.
On Friday, a Pakistani Muslim cleric and his followers offered rewards amounting to more than $1 million for anyone who killed the Danish cartoonists who drew the caricatures.
ne of the cartoonists, asking for anonymity, said this has not been the first threat.
"This is not the first time we've been threatened, but of course I dislike it every time. The drawing I made was meant as a practical joke aimed at the paper and yet I have been dragged into this absurd situation," the cartoonist told Reuters.
"I didn't think anyone outside the newspaper's readers would see the cartoon and now a billion people have. It's a surreal situation."
(Reporting from European, Asian and Middle Eastern bureaux)