COPENHAGEN,
January 31, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) –
Representatives of Danish Muslims said Tuesday, January 31, they
accepted the apology of a Danish newspaper for its blasphemous
cartoons of Prophet Muhammad (PBUH), urging more reasonable tone about
Islam and Muslims and steps to stop a boycott of Danish products in
the Muslim world.
"We
will clearly and articulately thank the prime minister (Anders Fogh
Rasmussen) and Jyllands-Posten for what they have done,"
Kasem Ahmad, spokesman for Denmark's Islamic Faith Community, said
Tuesday, January 31, according to the Associated Press (AP).
Carsten
Juste, editor-in-chief of Jyllands-Posten, apologized Monday
for his daily's printed blasphemous cartoons of Prophet Muhammad
(PBUH).
Published
last September, the 12 cartoons included portrayals of the Prophet
wearing a time-bomb shaped turban and showed him as a knife-wielding
nomad flanked by shrouded women.
Initially
passing with little comment, they were later reprinted in a Norwegian
magazine, prompting an international uproar and calls for an apology
from leading Muslim scholars and politicians alike.
Ending
Boycott
Danish
Muslims have also urged cooperation to stop an economic boycott of the
Danish products in the Muslim world following the daily's apology.
"We
have to work together now to establish a more reasonable tone in the
debate and a good dialogue about Islam and Muslims. And then we have
to work on how we can stop this boycott that is harming business in
Denmark," Amhad was quoted as saying by Agence France-Presse
(AFP).
Abdel
Rahman Abu Laban, a prominent Muslim figure in Denmark, echoed similar
calls for ending Muslim boycott of Danish products.
"We
are against economic boycotts and are sincerely sorry that it has come
to this. It was not our intention that Denmark should be hit by such
sanctions," Abu Laban said.
Muslim
countries have stepped up boycott of Danish products following the
anti-prophet cartoons, with Gulf retailers pulling Danish products
from their shelves.
Danish-Swedish
dairy giant Arla Food, one of Europe’s largest dairy producers, has
been the hardest hit by the Muslim boycott and was forced on Monday to
shut down production completely in Saudi Arabia.
Arla
Food sells an estimated two billion kroner (268 million euros, 328
million dollars) worth of products every year to Saudi Arabia.
Not
Enough
But
some Danish Muslims said the Jyllands-Posten apology was not
enough, calling for more conciliatory steps over the issue.
Jihad
El-Fara, President of the Muslim Council in Denmark, said he felt
sorry for the losses sustained by the Danish companies over the
boycott, but said the paper’s apology is not enough.
“Muslims
shouldn’t be complacent about an apology,” Fara told
IslamOnline.net over the phone from the Danish capital.
He
said the incident should be used by Danish Muslims to press for an
official representative body and for an official recognition of the
Muslim faith in the European country.
“We
want to be treated as equals with Christians, Jews and Sikhs, whose
religions are officially recognized by the state,” he fumed, putting
the unofficial number of Muslims at some 180,0000 people.
“We
must have a grand mosque in the city capital with a minaret, which
will serve as a center for disseminating true information on Islam and
helping clear stereotypes.”
Fara
admitted that Danish Muslims were not trying their best, but added
that the Danish government is also to blame for disunity.
“The
Belgian government, for instance, has moved recently to encourage
Muslims to have an official umbrella body,” he said.
Islam
is Denmark's second largest religion after the Lutheran Protestant
Church, which is actively followed by four-fifths of the country's
population.
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