MUSLIM
CAPITALS, February 5, 2006 (IslamOnline.net) – A cohort of Muslim
dignitaries and organizations are calling for the enactment of an
international law banning the publication of any insults to religious
symbols and values.
"The
United Nations must pass binding resolutions obliging all countries to
respect religions and religious symbols, similarly to the
anti-Semitism laws," Abdelaziz Belkhadem, Algerian Minister of
State and personal representative of President AbdelAziz Bouteflika,
told IslamOnline.net.
He
accused European countries of adopting double standards in dealing
with insults against Prophet Muhammad (PBUH).
"European
laws prohibit insults against ministers and officials but allow
ridiculing a sacred figure revered by millions of Muslims," said
Belkhadem, a former foreign minister.
Twelve
cartoons, published by Denmark's mass-circulation Jyllands-Posten
late September, included portrayals of the Prophet wearing a time-bomb
shaped turban and showed him as a knife-wielding nomad flanked by
shrouded women.
The
drawings have caused an uproar in the Muslim world and triggered a new
cultural battle over freedom of speech and respect of religions.
Incensed
Muslims have demonstrated against Denmark, burnt its flags and
boycotted its products, while several Muslim ambassadors have been
recalled in protest.
Respect
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The insulting drawings have caused an uproar in the Muslim world.
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Saad
Al-Din Al-Othmani, the secretary general of the Moroccan
Islamic-leaning Justice and Development party, echoed a similar call.
He
called during a march in Rabat on Saturday, February 4, for
"adopting an international charter on respecting all faiths and
religions."
Al-Othmani
said the march, joined by thousands of protestors, was meant to send a
clear message to the international community that Prophet Muhammad is
a red line.
"Muslims
would not allow anybody to mock at the prophet."
The
Moroccan Human Rights Center also called on the international
community and the UN to enact a law banning insults to all divine
religions.
Anti-Denmark
demonstrations over the insulting cartoons continued Sunday unabated
across the Muslim world.
Angry
Lebanese protestors set the Danish consulate in the capital Beirut on
fire in protest of the drawings, a day after infuriated Syrians
torched the Danish and Norwegian embassies in Damascus for the same
purpose.
Signatures
Joining
the campaign, Tunisian activists began collecting signatures to be
sent to UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and European governments,
pressing for a law on respecting Islam and its prophet, reported the
London-based Al-Quds Press news agency.
"…we
ask you to take all measures to guarantee respect of Prophet Muhammad
and hold accountable those who violate our religion," reads the
message being signed.
The
Muslim minority in Denmark has also entered the fray.
"Leaders
of the Muslim minority are seeking a UN resolution banning insults
against religious symbols and criminalizing such acts," Ahmed
Akari, a spokesman for the European Committee for Defending Prophet
Muhammad, told IOL.
He
urged support for the drive.
"We
call on all parties in the Muslim world to drum up support for such a
resolution."
The
Organization of the Islamic Conference (OIC) and the Arab League, the
Muslim world's two main political bodies, are seeking a UN resolution,
backed by possible sanctions, to protect religions following the
publication of provocative cartoons.
IOL
Staff Ahmed Fathy contributed to the story from Cairo.