The cost of criticizing jihadists

UN resolution is part of Islamic muzzle


Nat Hentoff
Washington Times
Monday, February 9, 2009


Geert Wilders - a film producer and also a member of parliament in
the
Netherlands - is facing a prison term there for "insulting" Muslims.
His short film "Fitna" in 2008 juxtaposed verses from the Koran with
scenes of violence committed by jihadist terrorists. The Dutch
appellate court refused a free-speech defense because the insults
were
so egregious.


If convicted, Wilders faces a maximum sentence of two years in
prison.
Said the defendant: "I lost my freedom already four and a half years
ago in October 2004, when my 24-hour police protection started
because
of threats by Muslims in Holland and abroad to kill me."


I have heard from Muslims in this country that jihadists around the
world have more than insulted traditional Muslim law by their fierce
punishments of both non-Muslims and Muslims who have acted in speech
or writing against jihadists' reinterpretations of the Quran. Some of
these protesters, exercising freedom of conscience, have been killed
for their "blasphemy."


What awaits Wilders in the Netherlands may be a harbinger of what
will
happen if a nonbinding Dec. 18 U.N. resolution, passed by a strong
majority in the General Assembly, becomes international law. The
resolution urges U.N. members to take state action against (punish)
"defamation of religion" and "incitement to religious hatred" caused
by defamation.
The main force behind this resolution, which was sponsored on its
behalf, is the 57 members of the Organization of the Islamic
Conference. Following the combustible cartoons of Prophet Muhammad
that were published in Denmark in September 2005, this organization
had a key role in expanding the violent protests against those
cartoons in a number of countries.


On Feb. 9, 2006, I received a copy of a letter to U.N. Secretary-
General Kofi Annan from a longtime source of mine. He was acting
against Sudan's National Islamic Front government killing, raping and
enslaving of black Christians and animists in southern Sudan. He was
John Eibner, director of Christian Solidarity International, which
was
instrumental in rescuing many of those captives from slavery in the
north of Sudan.


Eibner told Annan (as I reported at the time in the Feb. 14, 2006,
Village Voice): "The role of the Saudi-based Organization of Islamic
Conference (OIC), representing 57 Muslim states, in creating a
climate
for violent confrontation over the cartoons [was shown when] the OIC
set the stage for anti-free speech demonstrations at its
extraordinary
summit in Mecca in December 2005.


"The Muslim states," Eibner continued, "resolved - through many
demonstrations - to pressure, through a program of joint Islamic
action, international institutions, including the U.N., to
criminalize
insults of Islam and its prophet. ... On the 4th of February - the
day
the mob violence commenced - the Organization of Islamic Conference
described publication of the caricatures as acts of 'blasphemy.'
Blasphemy is punishable by death, according to Sharia law."


Revealingly, although there was outrage when, on Oct. 17, 2005, the
Egyptian newspaper Al Fagr published the cartoons on its front page,
there was nothing like the furious demonstrations elsewhere until
after the Organization of the Islamic Conference summit meeting in
December 2005.


After the OIC's focus on the cartoons at the Mecca summit, Syria,
Iran, Egypt, Lebanon and Qatar went on to carry the inflammatory
message of blasphemy. And the OIC's grand plan to get international
institutions to criminalize insults of Islam began to work. On Feb.
9,
2006, the European Union asked for a voluntary code of conduct to
prevent offending Muslims. And on the same day, Annan concurred with
an OIC proposal that the U.N. Human Rights Council "prevent instances
of intolerance, discrimination, incitement of hatred and
violence...against religions, prophets and beliefs."


Last Dec. 18, the OIC triumphed with the U.N. General Assembly's
passing of the nonbinding but rousing "defamation of religion"
resolution on behalf of the OIC, which emphasized only Muslims and
Islam by name as the forbidden targets of such "defamation." Pressure
may well continue to enshrine this resolution into international law.


The OIC had a New York Times ad on Inauguration Day, Jan. 20, "An
Invitation to a New Partnership," addressed to President Obama. The


organization wrote: "Throughout the globe, Muslims hunger for a new


era of peace. We firmly believe that America, with your guidance, can
help foster that peace, though real peace can only be shared - never
imposed."

The OIC, however, was at the time fresh from its U.N. victory to
actually impose silence on critics of Islamic jihadists, who have
long
been working to hijack the true Muslim religion. And why has the
press, particularly the American press, continued to be so silent on
this U.N. attack on individuals' right of conscience throughout the
world to call jihadist terrorism what it is? You might want to ask
your news sources why they have ignored this global gag rule on free
expression.
Nat Hentoff's column for The Washington Times runs on Mondays.


http://www.truthandgrace.com/ISLAM.htm



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