EU supports Denmark in cartoon row
The European Union has backed Denmark in the
row over cartoons of the Prophet Muhammad, but leaders of its legislature
differed over the limits of free speech.
The cartoons, first published in Denmark,
caused outrage in the Muslim world, and Danish and other European diplomatic
missions have been attacked in Syria, Lebanon, Iran, Pakistan and Indonesia.
Political leaders from all groups rallied behind Copenhagen in a special debate
in the European Parliament, declaring that an attack on Denmark was an attack on
all member states and condemning the resort to violence by some protesters.
However, libertarians warned against any
attempt to make the media adopt self-censorship.
"I want here today to
send my solidarity to the people of Denmark," European Commission
President Jose Manuel Barroso said, calling Danes "a
people who rightly enjoy the reputation as being amongst the most open and
tolerant not just in Europe but in the world".
Danish goods have been subject to boycotts in
some Muslim countries, and Barroso was applauded when he said such action was by
definition a boycott of European goods.
Companies slammed
Greens leader Daniel Cohn-Bendit condemned companies such as French hypermarket
chain Carrefour and Swiss food giant Nestle for issuing notices in Muslim
countries saying they were not Danish or did not stock Danish goods.
He and liberal spokeswoman Karen
Riis-Joergensen urged the European Commission to drop the idea of encouraging
the media to adopt a voluntary code of conduct that would avoid offending
religious sensibilities.
"If we start undermining
freedom of expression, our right to analyse any religion critically, our
fundamental right to speak freely and express ourselves will be violated,"
Riis-Joergensen said
However, Austrian President Heinz Fischer,
whose country holds the EU's rotating presidency, appeared in an address to the
EU legislature to call for media self-restriction.
"If a ban on pictorial representation
constitutes an essential element of a religion, one ought not and must not
offend against this principle twice - not only by disrespecting this ban, but
also by reinforcing this hurtful violation of a taboo in the form of a
caricature," he said.
Islamic tradition forbids depicting the
prophet.
Reverse condemnation
The leader of the centre-right European People's Party, Hans-Gert Poettering,
called for a commission of experts chosen by the EU and the Organisation of the
Islamic Conference to review schoolbooks for ethnic and religious prejudice.
Brandishing magazines published in Muslim
countries, he said: "We have documents of hundreds of
cartoons and caricatures which make a mockery of our values and our religion. So
these cartoons exist in the Islamic world too."
The socialist and liberal groups each symbolically chose a Danish EU member as
its speaker in the debate.
Poul Nyrup Rasmussen, the Socialist former
prime minister of Denmark, said he was shocked to see people attacked, flags
burned and embassies damaged.
He criticised his centre-right successor,
Anders Fogh Rasmussen, the prime minister, for refusing to meet ambassadors from
Muslim countries when they asked to see him last year after the cartoons were
first published.
Wednesday 15 February 2006
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