CARTOON JIHAD: THE NEXT GENERATION

By Michelle Malkin  •  February 13, 2006 03:55 PM

My kindergarten-age daughter had the day off from school today because of snow. Hamas gave its students the day off today…to denounce the West and protest the Mohammed cartoons in the West Bank city of Hebron. (Hat tip: Secular Blasphemy)

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John Noonan at The Officers’ Club asks: Shouldn’t they be in school?

***

Meanwhile, a few more Western media outlets have stepped forward to show their solidarity with Denmark and oppose dhimmitude:

The Weekly Standard

The Western Standard of Canada
The Jewish Free Press of Canada
The University of North Carolina’s Daily Tarheel

The Daily Illini backtracks.

Muslims in Canada are threatening to sue over publication of the cartoons.

In Algeria, two journalists who published the Mohammed cartoons have been thrown in jail:

Reporters Without Borders expressed dismay at the arrest, on 10 February 2006, of Abdel Halim Akram Sabra, editor of the independent weekly Al-Hurriya, journalist Yahya Al Aabed and editor of the Yemen Observer Mohammed Al Asaadi, for publishing the controversial cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed.

Al Hurriya and two other newspapers that published the cartoons, the Yemen Observer and the Al Raî Al Aam have been closed.

“We express our solidarity with Abdel Halim Sabra, Yahya Al Abed and Mohammed Al Asaadi and urge their immediate release,” said Reporters Without Borders. “They have only done their job in choosing to publish the controversial cartoons, as have dozens of other media worldwide.”

“It cannot be justified for them to pay for an editorial decision with their freedom, all the more so since they did it with a desire to inform and not in a provocative manner,” the organisation added.

“We appeal to the prosecutor who launched this action against them to demonstrative understanding and openness by withdrawing the complaints. The three newspapers should also be quickly allowed to resume publishing”, it concluded.

The prosecutor in Sanaa has also ordered the arrest of the editor of Al Rai Al Aam, Kamal el Aloufi.

Al-Hurriya, Yemen Observer and Al Raî Al Aam are privately-owned liberal newspapers which are facing legal action under a clause in the Yemeni press law which “bans publication of anything that harms the Islamic faith, denigrates a mono-theistic religion or a humanitarian belief”.

The journalists’ union, which at first reacted against the publication of the cartoons and announced the “suspension” of Abdel Halim Sabra, a member of the union, has now retracted and said it is troubled by these unfair arrests.

Al Huriya, Al Rai Al Aam and the Yemen Observer had published the cartoons, in the context of reporting on the reactions they had unleashed around the world.

Elsewhere, Jihad Momani and Hicham al Khalidi, editors of two Jordanian newspapers who were arrested, released and then rearrested for publishing the cartoons, were freed on bail on 12 February. A verdict is expected in the week of 20 February. Both journalists have pleaded not guilty.

The Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC) is demanding that the United Nations include language against blasphemy in the tenets of a new human rights body and EU foreign policy chief Javier Solana is caving in.

A bit of good news: The Brussels Journal is reporting that some moderate Muslims in Denmark are speaking up. But is it enough?

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