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WSWS : News
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Denmarks media mount a provocation by reprinting Mohammed
cartoons
By Jordan Shilton
28 February 2008
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Virtually the entire media in Denmark reprinted the notorious
caricatures of the Prophet Mohammed on February 13.
The decision to re-print came just one day after three men,
two Tunisians and a Danish national, were arrested for an alleged
plot to kill one of the cartoonists, Kurt Westergaard. At least
15 papers across Denmark reprinted images of the cartoons, in
what can only be described as a calculated provocation. Despite
having no evidence regarding the guilt of the three detained,
since the security service claimed it moved on suspicion and did
not have enough grounds to charge the men, the Danish media raced
to be first to print the cartoons, supposedly to underline their
defence of free speech.
Jyllands-Posten, the newspaper that commissioned and
first printed the cartoons in 2005, chose to use the image in
place of every letter O in the papers name Posten
throughout that days publication. Extra Bladet, a
prominent tabloid, took the opportunity to print the entire selection
of 12 cartoons in its February 13 edition. Even the nominally
left publication Politiken, which had criticised Jyllands-Posten
for its original publishing of the cartoon, reprinted the image.
In a free society, we can discuss how public discussions
should be conducted, but not if they should be conducted,
Tøger Seidenfaden, editor-in-chief, said.
Jyllands-Posten had justified its original publication
of the cartoon as an attempt to test the limits of self-censorship.
However, the history of Jyllands-Posten, including its
support for German and Italian fascism during the 1920s and 1930s,
makes abundantly clear that this was nothing more than an attempt
to stir up racial and religious antagonisms. When the original
printing of the cartoons failed to generate the desired outraged
response from Islamic groups, the newspaper continued to stoke
the controversy.
As protests spread, the images were republished in newspapers
across Europe under the specious claim that what was involved
was the defence of freedom of expression in opposition
to a totalitarian Islam.
The Danish government refused to meet with delegations of majority
Muslim countries opposed to the defamatory images, leading to
weeks of protests across the world during January and February
2006. Danish embassies were targeted and a boycott of Danish goods
by Middle Eastern countries was instituted. In the end this was
one of the major factors that impelled the government to seek
reconciliation.
As the World Socialist Web Site noted at the time: The
basic lie in the controversy over the caricatures of the Prophet
Muhammad published by Danish and European newspapers is the claim
that the conflict is between free speech and religious censorship,
or between Western enlightenment and Islamic bigotry. The systematic
defamation of Muslims is being used to prepare public opinion
for new wars against countries such as Iran and Syriawars
which will be even more brutal than the Iraq war, and could well
involve the use of nuclear weapons. (See Denmark
and Jyllands-Posten: The background to a provocation)
The latest events demonstrate the extent to which the so-called
liberal and left of centre sections of the establishment
have lurched rightwards. Justifying its decision to publish the
cartoon, Politiken said that the Danish media should stand
behind Jyllands-Posten when it is threatened with
terrorism. The alleged murder plot shows that there
are fanatic Islamists who are ready to make good on their threats
and there are people in this country who neither respect freedom
of expression nor the law.
The real assault on democratic rights
Recent events confirm the fraudulent character of the Danish
establishments claim to be defending democratic rights.
The fact that those arrested for the supposed plot were not charged
and that the two Tunisian nationals will be expelled from Denmark
without any legal proceedings whatsoever did not raise any concerns.
Little has been said in the media about the three accused of
the murder plot and their right to the presumption of innocence
until proven guilty and to a fair trial. The two Tunisians, although
they have been living in Denmark for more than seven years, are
to be deported under reactionary legislation which provides for
anyone deemed to be a national security threat to
be expelled from Denmark.
Lawyers representing the Danish Institute for Human Rights
and one of the Tunisians accused explained that the decision to
expel without trial has deep implications for fundamental principals
of democracy. It is incomprehensible that we can release
one of the three suspects in this affair, a Danish citizen, for
lack of evidence, yet expel two foreigners without knowing the
reason why or giving them the chance to defend themselves before
a judge, Franz Wenzel told Danish TV.
It is profoundly troubling that the reasons for these
expulsions will not be judged by an independent court, said
Christoffer Badse, a lawyer at a state-funded institute.
As an op-ed piece in the Middle East Times by Frank
Kaufmann put it, One presumes that Denmark upholds due process,
and that in Denmark arrests are not equated with guilt, but remarkably
15 Danish newspapers reprinted this very same cartoon on Wednesday
in protest against the alleged plot.
Even if these papers had waited for a guilty verdict
following due process, it would remain the case that an infantile
provocation of this magnitude is beyond reproach. Considering
the vast difficulties worldwide that derived from the initial
printing of these cartoons, there are simply no words to describe
the decision of not one or two deranged editors, but a coordinated
effort among 15 newspapers in what is generally regarded as a
modern nation.
The government remains committed to using the anti-democratic
law, which is part of Denmarks anti-terrorist legislation
adopted in 2002 after the September 11 attacks. Prime Minister
Anders Fogh Rasmussen stated on February 19 that the expulsions
were necessary to protect Denmark from terrorists, even though
no one has been charged with such a crime.
Social upheavals
Underscoring the degree of calculation, the cartoon was republished
in the midst of rioting in predominantly immigrant neighbourhoods
over a period of eight days, beginning February 10. The disturbances
were in response to increased police surveillance and stop-and-search
powers. Over 50 people were arrested during the troubles, as young
people took to the streets of many Danish cities, burning cars
and setting fire to other properties including schools.
There is no doubt that the Danish media seized the opportunity
to fuel tensions and justify the police crackdown.
It is the third time in just under a year that rioting has
broken out in Danish cities. In March 2007 many took to the streets
to protest the eviction of a group of squatters from a youth centre.
The protests became violent and were only quelled after a number
of days, with 650 people being arrested. On the six-month anniversary
of the demolition of the youth centre, riots broke out in Norrebro,
the local district, in early September.
It was after these events that police instituted a random stop-and-search
policy. Originally confined to a limited number of areas, they
were greatly expanded. The final straw that triggered the recent
disturbances appears to have been the alleged violence by police
towards an elderly Palestinian man in early February.
The prospects for young people, especially immigrants, are
bleak. Many complain of alienation and marginalisation. This position
has been actively encouraged by the governments right-wing
allies, the Danish Peoples party (DPP), which has taken
part in government coalitions with the Conservative and Liberal
parties since 2001 and has been the driving force behind some
of the most reactionary measures adopted, including the severe
tightening of immigration legislation.
More fundamentally, it is the consequence of the putrefaction
of the old organisations, particularly the Social Democrats and
the trade unions, and their inability to defend the basic social
interests of the working class. This has led many young people
to turn to violent protest as a means of expressing their sense
of injustice and outrage.
Writing in the British Guardian, Jacob Illeborg noted
that Denmark, once acknowledged for her liberal stance and
social egalitarianism, has over the last years become an increasingly
polarised society where the differences between the Danish majority
and migrants and especially Muslim migrants have been the dominant
political agenda. He added, In certain neighbourhoods
the atmosphere is now so tense that I avoid going there when in
Copenhagen.
It is still not clear what the implications of the re-printing
of the cartoons will be in terms of protests in other countries.
A relatively small protest took place in Khartoum, capital of
Sudan, Rafah in the Gaza Strip, in the Indonesian capital Jakarta,
in Bahrain and in three cities in PakistanMultan, Karachi
and the capital Islamabad. Earlier in the week, Pakistan summoned
the Danish ambassador to demand an apology and to express strong
protest to the republication. Iran and Egypt have also lodged
complaints and a conference organised in Denmark to discuss the
situation in Iraq issued a statement condemning the decision.
It is quite possible these protests could escalate. In this
environment, it is to be expected that any protests will be used
by the defenders of free speech to bolster their opinion
that Muslims are fundamentally intolerant and totalitarian
and that they threaten western democratic society. Thus the freedom
of the press campaign will be used to promote the most reactionary
of political ends.
See Also:
Danish elections:
Government remains dependent on far right
[29 December 2007]
Denmark and Jyllands-Posten:
The background to a provocation
[10 February 2006]
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