Friday, September 21, 2012

UN RIGHTS CHIEF WELCOMES EFFORTS TO RESTORE CALM IN WAKE OF ANTI-ISLAM FILM, CARTOONS

UN RIGHTS CHIEF WELCOMES EFFORTS TO RESTORE CALM IN WAKE OF ANTI-ISLAM FILM, CARTOONS
New York, Sep 21 2012 12:10PM
The UN human rights chief has welcomed the efforts of senior Muslim figures to restore calm amidst violence related to an anti-Islam film and cartoons, and highlighted how ignoring such "provocative" products can be the best way to deal with them

"Deliberate and obnoxious acts of this type should be deprived of the oxygen of publicity," said the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, according to her spokesperson. "Given what happened last week, and the fact that people are being killed, Charlie Hebdo is doubly irresponsible to publish these cartoons."

This week, the French magazine Charlie Hebdo published cartoons seen as denigrating to Islam, and which have led, in response, to concerns over the possibility of a violent reaction to them, with the French Government reportedly banning any street protests against the publication.

The cartoons come in the wake of violence in Libya and elsewhere in the Middle East, starting last week, in response to an anti-Islamic video produced in the state of California by a US citizen. The film has drawn widespread condemnation around the world, including from Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, as well as Ms. Pillay.

According to media reports, at least 30 people have been killed in the violence, and fresh protests broke out on Friday in countries across the Muslim world.

"Both the film and the cartoons are malicious and deliberately provocative," Ms. Pillay's spokesperson, Rupert Colville, told a media briefing in Geneva. "The film in particular provides a disgracefully distorted image of Muslims."

The spokesperson noted that High Commissioner Pillay said she fully understands why people wish to protest strongly against the film and the cartoons, and it is their right to do so, but peacefully.

The High Commissioner has also urged religious and political leaders to make a major effort to restore calm, and welcomes "the fact that a number of senior Muslim figures have been making similar statements about the need to rise above the provocations," Mr. Colville said.

He added, "As both the Secretary-General and the High Commissioner have stated, the fault line is not between Muslim and non-Muslim societies, but between a small number of extremists on different sides, with a vested interest in stirring hostility and conflict."
Sep 21 2012 12:10PM
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