On 19 Feb 2006, at 13:08, hadjar_wish wrote:
Saya garis bawahi alinea ini:
"It was the strongest expression of regret from the newspaper,
but stopped short of saying sorry for printing the cartoons,
instead, apologising for the turmoil they caused.
"These drawings apparently hurt millions of Muslims around the
world, so we now offer our apology and deep regret for what
happened because it is far from the paper's intention," said the
statement in the Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awasat titled "Apology" in
big bold letters.
"We did not set out to offend or insult any religion. We
apologise for being misunderstood and reiterate that we did not
intend to target anyone ... I hope this clears the
misunderstanding and God bless," the statement said.
Saya terjemahkan kedalam bahasa sehari-hari: "Lu pade goblok
pisan, dan kami sedih ngelihat lu pade segitu gobloknya..."
Danish paper expresses regrets
by
Sunday 19 February 2006 11:29 AM GMT
The statement comes five months after the publication
Nigeria and Pakistan have deployed troops to prevent a repeat of
violent protests over controversial cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad
as the Danish newspaper that first published them reprinted a
statement of regret to Muslims.
The Pakistani capital, Islamabad, was sealed off on Sunday to thwart a
rally by six Islamic parties, while Nigerian troops enforced a curfew
in two cities after 16 people died and 11 churches were torched in
rioting on Saturday.
Almost five months after publishing 12 cartoons of the prophet to
highlight what it described as self-censorship, the Jyllands-Posten
newspaper printed a full-page statement in a pan-Arab newspaper.
It was the strongest expression of regret from the newspaper, but
stopped short of saying sorry for printing the cartoons, instead,
apologising for the turmoil they caused.
"These drawings apparently hurt millions of Muslims around the world,
so we now offer our apology and deep regret for what happened because
it is far from the paper's intention," said the statement in the
Saudi-owned Asharq al-Awasat titled "Apology" in big bold letters.
"We did not set out to offend or insult any religion. We apologise for
being misunderstood and reiterate that we did not intend to target
anyone ... I hope this clears the misunderstanding and God bless," the
statement said.
Violent riots
At least 32 people have been killed and dozens wounded since Tuesday
in riots over the cartoons that swept through Libya, Nigeria and
Pakistan.
Protests have turned violent
Muslim religious and civic leaders across the world have insisted
anger will be quelled only with a clear and unequivocal apology from
the newspaper and the Danish government for the cartoons, considered
blasphemous by most of the world's estimated 1.3 billion Muslims.
Others have said it is too late for an apology, calling for
legislation in Europe that would outlaw caricaturing or insulting
religious symbols.
After the deaths of five Pakistanis in riots last week, an alliance of
six Islamic parties known as Muttahida Majlis-i-Amal (MMA) said they
would defy the ban despite the lockdown in Islamabad.
City police chief Sikandar Hayat told AFP "every possible step" had
been taken to prevent the rally or any attempts to incite violence
with 5000 police and 800 Rangers troops deployed.
"It's a curfew-like situation in the city," MMA spokesman Shahid
Shamsi told AFP, saying the "peaceful" rally would proceed despite the
arrests of many of the group's leaders.
Fears
Fearing further sectarian violence after the deadly riots a day
earlier, Nigeria drafted in police and troop reinforcements to
enforce a curfew in two cities in the north, which is mostly Muslim.
"These drawings apparently hurt millions of Muslims around the world,
so we now offer our apology and deep regret for what happened because
it is far from the paper's intention"
Statement by Jyllands-Posten
Fifteen people were killed on Saturday when Muslims protesting
against the caricatures in the Borno state capital. Maiduguri, turned
on the Christian minority, burning shops and churches, police
spokesman Haz Iwendi said.
A protester was killed and several injured when police in the city of
Katsina opened fire on a crowd of stone throwers, he said.
"Police and military personnel are on the streets in joint patrols to
ensure that there's no repeat of the unrest," local reporter Abdullahi
Bego told AFP by telephone from Maiduguri.
"It's Sunday, and Christians are going to church, and so there is fear
that someone might try to foment trouble," he added.
Eleven Libyan protesters were killed on Saturday and 35 others
injured in violent demonstrations that led to the torching of the
Italian consulate in Benghazi.
New cartoon
The demonstration was in response to Italian Reform Minister Roberto
Calderoli donning a T-shirt that reprinted the prophet caricatures.
Calderoli was pressured into resigning by Italian Prime Minister
Silvio Berlusconi over the affair, while the Libyan security minister
and other officials were sacked for excessive use of force in
Benghazi.
A student newspaper at Canada's University of Toronto has become the
latest to publish a cartoon of the Prophet Muhammad - one in which he
is depicted hugging Jesus aboard a swan entering a "tunnel of
tolerance".
Editor Nick Ragaz in a website statement said the cartoon was
intended to provoke debate, dialogue and thought.
"It cannot, under any circumstances, be understood to promote
violence or hate," he said.
Competition
Meanwhile, a Saudi businessman has launched a competition for the best
written descriptions of the Prophet Muhammad and his mission.
The pieces will be distributed in Denmark and other European
countries to educate non-Muslims on the true qualities of the
Prophet, the Saudi Gazette reports.
Prize money totaling SR100,000 ($26,600) "will be rewarded to the best
written pieces targeting non-Muslims and Western mentality describing
the Prophet.
"The essays must be informative, written by young Muslims to their
counterparts in the West."
The site www.alukah.com provides more information of the competition,
which closes on 29 March.
Aljazeera + AFP
By
You can find this article at:
http://english.aljazeera.net/NR/exeres/54DA4974-D9FE-4979-B403-
91446FD45FFE.htm
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