Editorial: Publication as a crime

Updated 21 September 2012
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Editorial: Publication as a crime

The crass decision of a French weekly magazine to publish deeply offensive and blasphemous cartoons against the Prophet (peace be upon him) needs to be condemned unequivocally. It is a deliberate attempt to further inflame the anger and distress of Muslims around the world, already scandalized at the odious anti-Islamic film made in the US. Given that international protests at this first outrage have already cost scores of lives, including those of the American ambassador to Libya and three of his colleagues, the provocative move by the French magazine, Charlie Hebdo, is in truth, nothing less than a crime.
The editor of this magazine is a potential murderer. He is intellectually dishonest and is prepared to have blood in hands in order to boost circulation figures. He cannot disown the outcome of his action on the grounds that he is not responsible for how others react.
It is not difficult to fathom why the editor of this so-called ‘satirical’ publication has chosen to carry these sickening cartoons. Working on the odious principle that there is no such thing as bad publicity, its editor, Stephane Charbonnier, knows that the bitter controversy he has stirred up, will enable him to sell more copies of his magazine. He pulled a similar stunt last year, with earlier noxious representations of the Prophet, denigrating Islam. He then protested his own outrage when the publication’s Paris offices were attacked in November.
As with the notorious Danish magazine cartoons, the excuse for this latest reprehensible behavior is “freedom of expression.” Charbonnier has protested lamely that he should be free to comment on the news of the day in a ‘satirical way.’ What this classic liberal claim misses entirely is that nobody has the freedom to offer such outrageous insults to any person or community, in the almost certain knowledge that the response will bring about deaths and injury of innocent people. There is, in short, no freedom, anywhere in the world, to provoke the loss of life.
There is also a more insidious motive here. This is to discredit Muslims by seeking to demonstrate that they are violent and bigoted when their faith is challenged, in a way that the secular West chooses to see as in no way provocative, even indeed, mildly amusing. Without faith, there is tragically little appreciation of how important their religion is to the 1.6 billion Muslims around the world. With such willful ignorance of Islam and the central role of faith in the lives of all good Muslims, many in the West are easily fooled, by those who hate Islam, into believing its followers are dangerous and violent. There is no comprehension that the angry protests against these blasphemies, actually demonstrate the deepest injury and profoundest grief that ordinary Muslims feel have been caused to them.
Tragically, it is not just the Islamaphobic idiots who will enjoy the ruckus they have caused. Equally menacing are the terrorists of Al-Qaeda and its affiliates. They claim obscenely to be acting in the name of Islam. These cartoons and the pathetic film have given them outstanding opportunities to commit yet more terror crimes against innocent people. It seems clear that last week, they hijacked the noisy but peaceful demonstration outside the US consulate in Benghazi in Libya, and launched an attack with scores of terrorists, to murder the four diplomats and sack the building.
US oversees missions are all now in various stages of lock-down with extra security details. As a result of the Charlie Hebdo crime, the French government has been forced to do the same, while Al-Qaeda self-righteously declares open season on anyone connected by nationality with these latest blasphemies.
It is entirely possible that innocent Frenchmen will now lose their lives in a terror attack. Charbonnier of course, will deplore any deaths, but protest his freedom to publish whatever he wants. Maybe he will be proved right in his cocky assumption that the French authorities cannot take action against him in the courts. However, the family and friends of any victims of terror attacks will feel very differently. They should decide to pursue civil actions against the magazine and its puffed-up editor, and seek heavy damages and extensive compensation for their loss. There is surely a good chance that they will win.
French law may not regard what Charbonnier has done as a crime. Nevertheless crime it is, in terms of its immorality, its disrespect and its barely-concealed hatred for the people of the Muslim world, and the faith and values that they hold so dear.


Editorial: Iran must not go unpunished

Updated 16 May 2019
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Editorial: Iran must not go unpunished

  • Arab News argues that while war is always a last resort, an international response is a must to curb Iranian meddling
  • US strikes worked well when Assad used chemical weapons against his people

The attacks on Tuesday by armed drones on Saudi oil-pumping stations, and two days beforehand on oil tankers off the coast of Fujairah in the UAE, represent a serious escalation on the part of Iran and its proxies, should the initial conclusions of an international investigation prove to be accurate. 

Riyadh has constantly warned world leaders of the dangers that Iran poses, not only to Saudi Arabia and the region, but also to the entire world. This is something former President Obama did not realize until the Iran-backed Houthis attacked the US Navy three times in late 2016. The recent attacks on oil tankers and oil pipelines were aimed at subverting the world economy by hitting directly at the lifeline of today’s world of commerce. Tehran should not get away with any more intimidation, or be allowed to threaten global stability. 

It was in 2008 that the late King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz called upon the US to “cut off the head of the snake,” in reference to the malign activities of Iran. Nearly a decade later, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman referred to Iran’s supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei as the “new Hitler of the Middle East.” We are in 2019 and Iran continues to wreak havoc in the region, both directly and through its well armed proxies. Crown Prince Mohammed was therefore clearly correct when he argued that appeasement does not work with the Iranian regime, just as it did not work with Hitler. The next logical step — in this newspaper’s view — should be surgical strikes. The US has set a precedent, and it had a telling effect: The Trump strikes on Syria when the Assad regime used Sarin gas against its people.

We argue this because it is clear that sanctions are not sending the right message. If the Iranian regime were not too used to getting away with their crimes, they would have taken up the offer from President Trump to get on the phone and call him in order to reach a deal that would be in the best interests of the Iranian people themselves. As the two recent attacks indicate, the Iranians insist on disrupting the flow of energy around the world, putting the lives of babies in incubators at risk, threatening hospitals and airports, attacking civilian ships and putting innocent lives in danger. As the case always is with the Iranian leadership, they bury their heads in the sand and pretend that they have done nothing. Nevertheless, investigations indicate that they were behind the attack on our brothers in the UAE while their Houthi militias targeted the Saudi pipelines.

Our point of view is that they must be hit hard. They need to be shown that the circumstances are now different. We call for a decisive, punitive reaction to what happened so that Iran knows that every single move they make will have consequences. The time has come for Iran not only to curb its nuclear weapon ambitions — again in the world’s interest — but also for the world to ensure that they do not have the means to support their terror networks across the region. 

We respect the wise and calm approach of politicians and diplomats calling for investigations to be completed and all other options to be exhausted before heading to war. In the considered view of this newspaper, there has to be deterrent and punitive action in order for Iran to know that no sinister act will go unpunished; that action, in our opinion, should be a calculated surgical strike.