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Muslims
make up around three percent of Denmark’s 5.3 population.
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COPENHAGEN,
April 8, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – Danish Muslims
will be able, for the first time, to burry their dead in an Islamic
cemetery after a government decision, some linked to the recent furor
over caricatures mocking Prophet Muhammad (peace and blessings be upon
him).
"We
are pleased, happy," Kasem Said Ahmad, chairman of the Danish
Islamic Burial Foundation, told Reuters Saturday, April 8.
The
Ministry of Ecclesiastical Affairs has approved the construction of
the burial site on 50,000 square meters of land bought by the
foundation in southern Copenhagen several years ago.
The
decision closes a legal struggle that lasted for more than seven
years.
"It
is an expression that Islam and Muslims are a part of Danish
society," said Ahmed.
Muslims
make up around three percent of Denmark’s 5.3 population, making
Islam the second largest religion after the Lutheran Protestant
Church.
Tolerance
The
center-right government of Prime Minister Anders Fogh Rasmussen has
been accused of religious intolerance, partly because of a crackdown
on immigration, according to Reuters.
One
of the main areas of contention with the Muslim minority has been the
lack of an Islamic cemetery.
"Against
the unfortunate background of the publishing of the cartoons, I see
this as an expression of accommodation and tolerance that I believe,
fundamentally, characterizes the Danish government -- also in regard
to Muslims," said Ahmad.
The
Scandinavian country has been at the center of Muslim anger since the
publication of twelve offensive cartoons by its mass-circulation daily
Jyallands Posten late last year.
The
anti-Prophet drawings, considered blasphemous under Islam, triggered
global and sometimes violent protests as well as a boycott of Danish
goods.
The
go-ahead for the cemetery is not the first positive sign to emerge
from the cartoons controversy.
Late
in March, the first hijab-clad talk show presenter make her debut on
Denmark's DR2 television network.
Asmaa
Abdol-Hamid, a 24-year-old Danish Muslim of Palestinian origin, is
hosting an eight-part program on the fallout of the Danish cartoons on
the DR2 network.