Outrage Over Dutch Anti-Quran Movie
Right-Wing Legislator's Film Short Says Islam's Holy Book Incites Violence
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Right-wing Dutch lawmaker Geert Wilders speaks during an interview with the Associated Press in the Hague, Netherlands, Thursday, Jan. 31, 2008. (AP Photo/Fred Ernst)
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A Dutch Cabinet minister postponed his trip to Somalia on Friday due to "specific threats" linked to the film, and the Dutch government has urged lawmaker Geert Wilders to scrap his film for the safety of its citizens abroad.
But Wilders said Monday he has begun negotiations with Dutch broadcasters about airing the 15-minute film, "Fitna." He said he will only allow them to show it in its entirety, and if they refuse, he plans to show it to the media and post it on the Internet.
"We have never learned to be intolerant toward people who are intolerant toward us, toward cultures that are intolerant toward us," he said in a recent Associated Press interview.
The right-wing legislator previously warned of a "tsunami" of Islam swamping the Netherlands and said Muslims should tear up half of the Quran if they want to live here.
Wilders has lived under round-the-clock security since the 2004 murder of filmmaker Theo van Gogh by an Islamic radical enraged by his short film, "Submission," a fictional study of abused Muslim women with scenes of near-naked women with Quranic texts engraved on their flesh.
The film "Fitna" - an Arabic word meaning discord - puts the centuries-old Dutch traditions of religious tolerance and freedom of speech on a collision course.
If it airs, Dutch Muslims are expected to file criminal complaints for racial or religious vilification. Prosecutors would then have to decide whether to charge Wilders with any offense.
"Our law is very clear - anybody can make a film. We have freedom of expression and you cannot restrict that," says Moroccan-born Sadik Harchaoui, chief of the Forum Institute for Multicultural Development.
"Can you offend people? The answer is yes. I'm not saying you should do it or it is desirable, but you can," he added. "But if the film is insulting and preaches hate, then the law has to take action."
The Dutch government says it cannot ban the film but is attempting to distance itself from Wilders, the leader of the Freedom Party, which holds nine of Parliament's 150 seats.
"It is our responsibility to make clear to everyone that the views and actions of this one elected representative are not those of the government," Prime Minister Jan Peter Balkenende told reporters last week. "We defend the core values of freedom and respect. We guarantee freedom of expression and of religion, for Muslims as for everyone else."
Already the film has provoked reactions from Damascus, Tehran and other capitals of predominantly Muslim countries.
Pakistan's government ordered Internet providers to restrict access to YouTube, allegedly to prevent Pakistanis from accessing a clip of Wilders in which he makes derogatory remarks about Islam. The move inadvertently caused a brief worldwide outage of the video sharing site.
In Afghanistan, protesters set fire to Dutch flags over the weekend and Islamic clerics called for the withdrawal of Dutch troops.
NATO's Dutch secretary-general, Jaap de Hoop Scheffer, says he too is worried about the "potentially serious consequences" for alliance troops in Afghanistan, where 1,500 Dutch troops serve in the NATO-led force in the volatile south.
"If they are put in the line of fire because of the film, I am concerned," he told Dutch television news show "Buitenhof."
De Hoop Scheffer says people around the world, including some in the U.S. administration, have been asking him about the film.
So far, the reaction among the 850,000 Muslims living in this country of 16 million has been muted, but the Dutch government has warned municipalities to be on alert for rioting if and when the film appears.
The moderate National Moroccan Council has said it is trying to "neutralize the threat" posed by the film, but cannot rule out violence at home.
"We will have succeeded if, after the film, Mr. Wilders is frustrated," chairman, Mohamed Rabbae said at a news conference in January. "If he sees there are no riots and Muslims are cleverer and more democratic than he thinks."
By Mike Corder
© MMVIII The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
- Someone is gonna get murdered. You just know it.
Muslims...you gotta love ''em. - Reply to this comment
- It seems all religions are the same. Only the names of the leading prophets have been changed to appease the locals.
There is only one way to believe. Goddess and God. )O(
All religions persecute women. Women were in charge until a few thousand years ago-when the wars started happening and escalating. Says something doesn''t it. Religion is for the benefit of men. Women need to wake up and realize this, and return to believing in the Goddess.
)O( - Reply to this comment
- Finally, someone who is willing to stand up to those "peace loving" Muslims!!!!
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- nikkicatt1: Sounds like comments of a typical NOW supporter. Excuse me while I puke!!! BARFFFF!!!
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- I have no problem with people practicing peacefully what ever religion/cult beliefs they have until those people start pushing and demanding their beliefs upon others. When this demand becomes violent and with no regard for the life and beliefs of others outside their circle, then those religious/cult members need to culled from the human population.
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- As with all religion, there are fanatics. I have a very close freinf who is Muslim and I am Catholic. We compared the Quran with the Bible and found that they are very similar. How can anyone say that the Muslim women are treated poorly when the Bible is worded pretty much the same? Living in America where there is seperation of Church and State is the ONLY reason the Christian women are Not treated as property. Even though the backbone of the Catholic Church is women, they have few rights and are banned from the preisthood. (Sound liked all other religions - don''t it!!)
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