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| Lebanese demonstrators gather at the Danish
consulate after setting fire to it in Beirut, capital city of Lebanon, on
Feb. 5, 2006. Demonstrators set fire to the Danish consulate in Beirut on
Sunday in a protest against cartoons blaspheming Prophet Mohammad, which
were first published on a Danish newspaper. (Xinhua
Photo) |
¡¡UNITED NATIONS, Feb. 5 (Xinhuanet) -- UN Secretary-General Kofi
Annan on Sunday repeated his call for Muslims to accept the apology made by a
Danish newspaper for publishing cartoons of the Prophet Mohammad, and refrain
from violent reactions.
"The secretary-general is alarmed by the threats and
violence, including the attacks on embassies, that have occurred in Syria and
Lebanon and other countries over the past few days," his spokesman said in a
statement.
Large-scale demonstrations took place in Damascus on
Saturday and protestors set the Danish and Norwegian embassies on fire. A day
later, a similar scenario was witnessed in Beirut, the capitalof Lebanon, where
the Danish embassy was ransacked and set ablaze.
The statement said Annan "shares the distress felt by
many Muslims at the publication of caricatures which they see as insulting to
their religion."
But in the meantime, it said, "he wishes to emphasize
that such resentment cannot justify violence, least of all when directed at
people who have no responsibility for, or control over, the publications in
question."
Twelve cartoons of Mohammed, one of them portraying
the Islamic religion's founder wearing a bomb-shaped turban, were first
published in Denmark's Jyllands-Posten daily last September. Some were later
reprinted in Norway, the Netherlands, France and other European countries.
The cartoons have sparked waves of protests across
the Islamic world. Islam considers any image of the prophet blasphemous.
The Danish paper's editor initially refused to
apologize for publishing the caricatures, insisting on the right to freedom of
expression, but finally issued an apology late Monday for offending Muslims.
In Sunday's statement, Annan again urged Muslims "to
accept the apology given by the Danish newspaper, to act in the true spirit of a
religion famed for its values of mercy and compassion, and to put this episode
behind them."
The UN chief also appealed to all parties,
particularly all governments and authorities, whether religious or secular, to
do everything they can to reduce tension and to avoid actions or statements
which might increase it.
"He believes that now, more than ever, it is time for
people of good will in all faiths and communities to come together in a spirit
of dialogue and mutual respect," the statement added. Enditem |