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Two
Spanish cry over their relative's coffin
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MADRID,
March 14 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Muslims in Spain
are panicked that Al-Qaeda network ‘possible involvement’ in the
train blasts in Madrid would backlash against them and spawn
intolerance.
“Terrorism
is blind, it simply seeks out the weakest people. We're victims too,
and if it turns out to be Al-Qaeda, we'll be double victims,” Ahmad,
a 38-year old Moroccan in Madrid, told Reuters news agency.
The
fears came hard on the heels of statements made by Spain’s Interior
Minister Angel Acebes, who said Al-Qaeda network has claimed anew responsibility
for Madrid’s train blasts in a videotaped message.
Spain’s
Foreign Minister Ana Palacio, however, told the BBC Sunday that the
Basque separatist group ETA remained the prime suspect.
At
least 200 people were killed and up to 1500 others wounded in Thursday's
carnage, in which 10 bombs tore through packed morning
commuter trains and three railway stations in the southeast of the
capital.
“We
don't want it to be Al-Qaeda, just as the Basques don't want it to be
ETA. But what difference does it make, knowing who it was? We're all
affected,” added Ahmad, who declined to give his full name.
Mustafa,
a 40-year-old Moroccan living in the multi-racial district of Lavapies
resident, said those who carried out the carnage “have no heart”.
“We
don't know who it is, we just have to count the bodies. They attacked
the poorest people who were on the train at that time of the morning.
Our people were killed too,” Mustafa said.
Asked
if life will get worse if al Qaeda was behind Thursday's killings,
Mustafa said: “I hope not…Maybe they'll come and get me and they
might get you too for talking to me”.
Tarnishing
The Image
Echoing
same fears, Muslims in the northern city of Bilbao gathered after
Isha’ prayer, believing that Al-Qaeda specter could tarnish their
image in the eyes of the Christian majority in the city, France’s Le
Courrier Internationale daily reported Sunday.
“We
fear that such a carnage might backlash against us and trigger a hate
and racist campaign,” said 40-year-old Javier, who embraced Islam
two years ago.
“I
am sure many [of the Spaniards] do not know much about our tolerant
religion. Not all Basques are ETA members nor all Muslims belong to
Al-Qaeda.”
“If
it is Al-Qaeda’s work, it will be highly embarrassing. These attacks
run counter to the tenets of Islam…It would really hurt me if the
perpetrators were Muslims,” he added.
Javier
has hardly voiced his fears when two girls passed by the small mosque
in Bilbao, describing the Muslim gathering as a “bunch of
evildoers”.
Al-Jazeera
satellite channel further said that a Spanish policeman had reportedly
shot dead an Arab grocer as the latter refused to place a mourning
mark on his shop.
Nourdin,
an Algerian, said it is disastrous that people here know nothing about
Islam.
Ahmad
Al-Hanafi, an Egyptian journalist living in Bilbao for eight years,
said his heart breaks for those innocent people killed in the train
carnage.
But
“Al-Qaeda does not represent us and I am profoundly saddened by the
attacks,” he stressed.
Hanafi
joined Friday, March 12, a rally in a show of solidarity with the
families of the victims as part of a nationwide
rallies to protest against all forms of terrorism.
World
Muslims condemned
Saturday, March 13, the Madrid blasts, sending it clear that killing
civilians is forbidden in their religion regardless of where or who
carry out the attacks.
Some
94 percent of Spain’s 40 million population are Christian Catholics.
Islam had been the country’s main religion nearly 800 years until
the Catholic monarchs reconquered the southern city of Granada in
1492.