[nasional_list] [ppiindia] From Damascus to Kandahar

  • From: "Ambon" <sea@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: <"Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@freelists.org>
  • Date: Tue, 14 Feb 2006 12:22:09 +0100

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**http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2006/781/in1.htm

       9 - 15 February 2006
      Issue No. 781 



From Damascus to Kandahar
Global anti-Danish protests take on a darker tone, Serene Assir writes 

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

More than four months after a now infamous series of 12 cartoons were first 
published in Danish newspaper Jyllands-Posten on 28 September, protests 
spreading across the Arab and Muslim world took on an angrier, and in some 
cases more violent tone. On Monday, at least five people were killed in 
Afghanistan when police fired tear gas and bullets at protesters shouting 
"Death to Denmark!" among other slogans. Meanwhile, in Puntland, Somalia, a 
14-year-old boy was trampled by a stampede of demonstrators when police fired 
live rounds to disperse the crowds surrounding the United Nations and aid 
agency buildings. 

The cartoons vary in their degree of offensiveness to Muslims. While it is 
forbidden to portray the Prophet at all, some of them essentially characterise 
him as a terrorist. One shows him wearing a turban in the shape of a bomb. 
Protests have now been taking place for two weeks, when the global debate on 
the issue resurfaced and a boycott of Danish goods started to take its toll on 
the small European country, but it was in Damascus earlier this week that they 
began to involve a heavy-handed violence which police -- bizarrely enough, 
given the history of police action in Syria -- say they were not able to keep 
in check. To begin with, hundreds of protesters gathered around the building 
housing the Danish embassy, in what appeared to be the latest of peaceful 
demonstrations. It was not long, however, before some of the protestors lunged 
at the grounds and set fire to the building -- a far cry from protests in Cairo 
last week near Al-Azhar Mosque or even the occupation of the European Union 
offices in Gaza by members of the Al-Aqsa Martyrs Brigades. 

In Beirut, the scene was similar. Hundreds of protesters called by various 
Sunni authorities -- some political, others religious -- gathered outside the 
Danish embassy in the majority Christian neighbourhood of Achrafiyye and, 
according to demonstrator Sarah Hammoud, who works in the Lebanese Central 
Bank, "called out there is no God but God, and Mohamed is his Prophet. We were 
shocked when a new group of protesters arrived, however, and the day turned 
violent." The building housing the embassy was burnt, and a nearby church 
destroyed. "They were there to make trouble -- their demonstration had nothing 
to do with ours, and we felt terrible about what happened to the church," she 
told Al-Ahram Weekly. 

The trouble with violence, however, is that it is incredibly difficult to 
control once it has been unleashed. And there will always be groups of people, 
perhaps owing to a greater radicalism, or perhaps because they are simply 
expressing some form of pent-up frustration, who will seek platforms such as 
this at which to vent. "I suspect about one out of 1,000 of protestors in the 
different countries has actually seen the cartoons," human rights activist and 
director of the Cairo Institute for Human Rights Studies Bahieddine Hassan 
said, effectively likening today's phenomenon to that which emerged over Salman 
Rushdie's Satanic Verses. "I also suspect that those who initially expressed 
their anger -- including heads of state and leaders of public debate -- acted 
in a manipulative fashion to arouse passions in people for their own, selfish 
purposes." He added that it has been uniquely useful for various governments, 
including those of Egypt, Saudi Arabia and presumably Syria, to allow attention 
to be diverted so radically away from an array of domestic problems, such as 
the poor handling of the ferry disaster, which remains tragically unresolved. 

Of course, the double standards do not end there. While a number of European 
newspapers republished the cartoons last week, "the Danish government has still 
refused to provide Muslims with a sincere apology for carrying such deeply 
offensive material," Ibrahim Nawar, head of Arab Press Freedom Watch told the 
Weekly. While publishers in the West have either defended their own or others' 
right to publish the cartoons, "we consider this act one which amounts to hate 
speech rather than freedom of expression," he added. Indeed, several European 
countries have already integrated into their penal systems articles which 
punish hate speech, and although prosecutions and convictions have been very 
rare, the concept has been alive and well for decades. One need look no further 
than the prosecution of a British historian in Austria, for example, who 
challenged historical facts on the Holocaust. In an attempt to retaliate and 
blast a taboo or two, the Belgian-Dutch Arab European League published on their 
website through this week a series of cartoons smearing different issues 
considered "sacred" in the West. One depicted a man marrying a donkey, in an 
attempt by cartoonist Nabucho to mock gay marriage rights, while another showed 
Anne Frank in bed with Adolf Hitler. "If it is the time to break taboos and 
cross all the red lines," reads the site, "we certainly do not want to stay 
behind."

But perhaps this is missing the point. For, quite simply, the Western press has 
hardly practised freedom of speech over recent years, except when it has suited 
governments, regardless of their economic independence. And if the Danish press 
has crossed a whole gully of red lines with regards to the Muslims of the 
world, perhaps this global debate provides a good opportunity to focus on 
another, perhaps more urgent issue, namely, why exactly is it that such 
vilification, deliberate provocation or, at the very least, sheer ignorance of 
Muslim sensitivities was possible in the first place. 

"The problem has little to do with the so-called 'clash of civilisations', 
which in itself does not really exist," Hassan said. What has existed recently, 
however, was the deliberate withholding of information by the highly revered 
BBC -- which has been conspicuously, even cynically PC enough not to republish 
the cartoons, as have been United States publishers -- on Falluja and the use 
of poisonous gases which wiped out hundreds of people mercilessly, despite 
calls for exposure from bodies such as the BRussels Tribunal. Their excuse then 
was that they simply didn't have enough information -- which was bizarre given 
the number of videotapes they received from freelance journalists and activists 
working on the ground in Iraq, according to Italian film-maker Gabriele 
Zamparini. It is also strange how Western statesmen are now defending the 
inalienable right to freedom of expression, when a recently unearthed scandal 
exposed US President George W Bush's repressed intention to bomb the Al-Jazeera 
headquarters in Doha. 

Indeed, perhaps the cartoons scandal has exposed deeper hurts on both sides of 
the story. The Western press, albeit privatised and theoretically more 
independent than its counterpart in the mostly underdeveloped, economically 
deprived Muslim world, has also been subject through recent years to its own 
fair share of pressure from the political giants of the world, ranging from the 
all-too-well-established Zionist lobby, to Washington and London, to an 
increasingly domesticated, consumption-orientated public opinion which simply 
doesn't want to watch massacres which, whether we like it or not, continue to 
unfold in Iraq, Afghanistan and, on a smaller scale, in pretty much everyone's 
back yard. In this case, however, there was no lobby powerful enough to stop 
the cartoons from being printed in the first place, or to have any EU-based 
editors sacked. Sadly enough, as far as policy makers and donors -- who are the 
real movers and shakers in today's privatising economies -- are concerned, the 
cartoonist ended up on the right side (pun intended) and thus has had his 
freedom of expression protected. Only this once, mind you. 

Meanwhile, if telling the truth was ever the job of a respected journalist, 
then Danish cartoonists need to urgently revise their manuals. It would be 
naïve to even try and argue that it is the job of a free press to vilify an 
already vilified people. And, as for the protests, perhaps now that the Muslim 
world has tried collective action and effective boycotts -- for once -- there 
is a vague possibility that someone, somewhere, may start to think about 
boycotting those who continue to occupy Arab lands, murder children, and are 
bent on worshipping the virtues of "free" trade to Third World rulers and 
hungry, unemployed peoples.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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